Nightmare at 20,000 Feet

Nightmare at 20,000 Feet [1963]

Richard Matheson (1926-)

LITERARY TERMS

plot: the structure of a story. It shows arrangement of events and actions within a story.

conflict: the dramatic struggle between two forces in a story. Without conflict, there is no plot. Causes of conflict can be reduced to four main categories: character versus character, character versus society, character versus nature, and character versus self

inciting force: the character or event that triggers the conflict

dramatic irony: irony that occurs when the meaning of a situation is understood by the audience or reader but not by a character in the story or play

TWILIGHT ZONE THEME

NARRATOR (V.O.): You unlock this door with the key of imagination. Beyond it is another dimension - a dimension of sound, a dimension of sight, a dimension of mind. You're moving into a land of both shadow and substance, of things and ideas. You've just crossed over into the Twilight Zone.

ACT ONE

(Fade in on an AIRPLANE CABIN, one dark and stormy night in the early 1960s. Airplane and crowd NOISE drowns out much of the conversation between the passengers getting on the plane and the blonde, clipboard-carrying STEWARDESS who checks their boarding passes. A uniformed policeman, possibly a sheriff, enters and the stewardess sees that he's wearing a gun on his hip, so he shows her his badge as well as his boarding pass.)

STEWARDESS: All right. Fine. Enjoy your flight.

(The policeman heads for his seat. One passenger later, an attractive couple enter. This is BOB and JULIA WILSON. Bob gives the plane an apprehensive look while showing their passes to the stewardess. She clears them to go through. There's no assigned seating so Julia, leading the way, points out a couple of likely seats to Bob.)

JULIA: Those all right?

BOB: Yeah. Be fine. (He takes off Julia's coat.) Here, give me that.

(Bob stows their coats in the overhead bin. Bob and Julia start to sit -- Julia on the aisle, Bob by the window.)

JULIA: (suddenly concerned) Do you want me to sit next to the window?

BOB: (reassuring) No.

(They sit.)

BOB: I'm fine. I can sit--

(Bob sees that he's seated by the auxiliary exit and tenses up.)

JULIA: Honey, what is it? The emergency window? You want to move?

BOB: No, no, no. Doesn't matter. What's the difference where I sit? It's not the seat. It's the airplane.

(Bob takes out a pack of cigarettes and starts to light up. Julia notices the non-smoking sign is lit.)

JULIA: Honey, don't smoke that now. Wait till the plane takes off.

BOB: (puts the cigarette away) I'm not acting much like a cured man, am I?

JULIA: Honey, you are cured. Doctor Martin wouldn't let you fly if you weren't, would he?

BOB: I suppose not.

JULIA: (takes his arm) I mean if you weren't well, Doctor Martin just wouldn't let you fly all the way back home. It's just that simple.

BOB: Well, you make it sound simple, anyway.

JULIA: It is, Bob.

BOB: Yeah. Here I am hogging the whole stage and you're so tired. I've missed you... these last six months.

(Bob kisses Julia. They hold hands.)

JULIA: It's all over now, Bob. And mama's taking you home.

(Julia steals a kiss.)

BOB: It must have been awful for you. Taking care of the kids. Bearing the full responsibility.

JULIA: Well, everything is still intact.

BOB: Except me.

(The FLIGHT ENGINEER gets ready to shut the cabin door.)

JULIA: Now, Bob, I'm not going to let --

THUMP

(The loud THUMP of the cabin door slamming shut startles Bob.)

FLIGHT ENGINEER: (on the phone to the cockpit) Cabin door secured.

JULIA: (off Bob's jumpiness) What?

BOB: Just a little... abject cowardice, that's all. I'm gonna be all right. Had a teensy weensy breakdown. Now, I'm cured. Understanding -- it's wonderful. It isn't the airplane at all. Overtension and overanxiety due to underconfidence.

(The cabin lights dim as the stewardess makes a final walk down the aisle before take-off.)

STEWARDESS: (to Bob) Seat belt, sir.

(A very nervous Bob buckles himself. He glances around uncertainly, turns on the little lights above his seat, offers a smile to Julia, and tries to stay calm.)

NARRATOR (V.O.): Portrait of a frightened man: Mr. Robert Wilson, thirty-seven, husband, father, and salesman on sick leave. Mr. Wilson has just been discharged from a sanitarium where he spent the last six months recovering from a nervous breakdown, the onset of which took place on an evening not dissimilar to this one, on an airliner very much like the one in which Mr. Wilson is about to be flown home...

(A FAST PAN to the omniscient NARRATOR, in suit and tie, standing beneath an airport direction sign that reads: "TERMINAL --->")

NARRATOR: ...the difference being that, on that evening half a year ago, Mr. Wilson's flight was terminated by the onslaught of his mental breakdown. Tonight, he's traveling all the way to his appointed destination which, contrary to Mr. Wilson's plan, happens to be in the darkest corner of the Twilight Zone.

(FADE IN on the unlit NO SMOKING and FASTEN SEAT BELT signs at the front of the airplane's CABIN. The seat belt sign pops on just as the stewardess enters through the cockpit door just beneath them.)

AIRPLANE CHIME

(She closes the door behind her and smiles at a few of the passengers, working her way up the aisle, eyeing everyone carefully.)

STEWARDESS: (to a passenger) Fasten your seat belt, sir.

(The stewardess approaches Bob and Julia.)

STEWARDESS: (to a Bob) Fasten your seat belt, sir.

(Bob starts to fasten his seat belt.)

(CUT TO: The PLANE flying through dark storm clouds -- lots of wind and rain and lightning and THUNDER.)

FLYING

RAIN

THUNDER

(CUT TO: The CABIN where Bob tries to fasten Julia's seat belt while she sleeps, only to wake her.)

BOB: Sorry, darling. Go back to sleep.

JULIA: I shouldn't've taken that sleeping pill. I should stay awake with you.

BOB: No, no, I don't want you to, sweetheart. Go back to sleep. I'm all right.

JULIA: Can't you sleep?

BOB: I will. Don't worry about me.

JULIA: Okay.

(Julia pulls her jacket over her and nods off while Bob turns to his newspaper. He glances out the window which directly overlooks the wing of the plane. It's dark and rainy but two prop engines are clearly visible. As Bob continues to stare, he spots something besides wind-swept rainwater moving on the wing. It looks like the figure of a man. An ape-like man skulking slowly across the wing. The wind ought to have blown this creature away, but it easily stands upright, unaffected by the weather or the airspeed. Bob is wild-eyed in disbelief. He turns to Julia twice, but she's asleep. He looks out the window. The creature squats and seems to be staring back at him, sort of taking an interest in Bob, the way a man might take an interest in an animal locked up in a cage at the zoo. An alarmed Bob starts looking around for the stewardess. She's nowhere to be seen.)

(Bob frantically pushes the button above his seat to summon her.)

AIRPLANE CHIME

(He stops only to check that the creature on the wing is still there. It is. It watches Bob with curiosity. The stewardess enters the cabin and Bob beckons to her.)

BOB: Here. Quickly!

STEWARDESS: May I help you?

BOB: There's a man out there!

STEWARDESS: What?

BOB: Look, look, he's crawling on--

(Bob turns back to the window. The creature is gone. Bob's eyes widen. He stares out the window for a long moment and then, turns apologetically to the stewardess just as Julia wakes up.)

BOB: Sorry. It must have been...

JULIA: Bob? What is it?

STEWARDESS: (to Julia) Oh, it's nothing, Mrs. Wilson. (to Bob) Can I get you anything?

BOB: A glass of water.

STEWARDESS: Surely.

(The stewardess departs. Julia rubs her eyes. Bob stares out the window and tries to come to grips with what he's just seen.)

JULIA: Something wrong?

BOB: No. I--I thought I saw something out there.

JULIA: What?

(Bob realizes he can't tell her. She'll think he's cracking up. He shakes his head.)

BOB: Nothing.

(Bob closes the window's curtain to block his view of the wing.)

BOB: I guess I need a little sleep.

JULIA:Are you all right?

BOB: Yeah, fine.

JULIA: (checks her watch) Don't you think you ought to take a sleeping pill now?

BOB: (rubs his eyes) Yeah, I-I'll take one of those, uh...

(Julia digs the pills out of her purse as the stewardess arrives with a paper cup of water. Bob lets out his breath, trying to compose himself.)

STEWARDESS: Here you are.

BOB: Thank you.

STEWARDESS: You're welcome. Can I get you a blanket?

BOB: No. (to Julia) Honey?

(Julia hands Bob the sleeping pills.)

JULIA: (to the stewardess) Oh, no thanks.

(The stewardess leaves. Bob swallows the pill and the entire cup of water.)

CUT TO: The PLANE flying through dark storm clouds -- more wind and rain and lightning and THUNDER.

THUNDER

CUT TO: The airplane's CABIN, a little later, where Julia is ready to go back to sleep.

JULIA: You'll be all right now?

BOB: Yeah, fine.

JULIA: Will you wake me if you need me?

BOB: I will.

(Julia shuts her eyes and dozes off. Bob takes a deep breath and shuts his eyes. But they don't stay shut. The thing on the wing is still bothering him. He glances at Julia. Seeing that she's asleep, Bob hesitantly lifts his hand to the window curtain. But he immediately lowers it, afraid of what he might see on the other side. After a long moment, he comes to a decision. Very slowly, he reaches for the curtain. Abruptly, he whips the curtain away to reveal THE CREATURE'S HIDEOUS FACE pressed against the glass, staring at Bob curiously.)

SUSPENSE

(Bob freaks. He shuts his eyes, rears his head back, opens his mouth, and starts whispering to himself.)

BOB: It isn't there. It isn't there.

(Bob opens his eyes but does not look at the window.)

BOB: (weakly, to Julia) Honey? Would you wake up, honey?

(But she's fast asleep. Bob sees the creature hasn't moved. Panicking, Bob sees the stewardess.

BOB: (gestures to the stewardess) Quickly!

(While Bob turns to the stewardess, the creature nonchalantly flies straight up and out of view. The stewardess arrives just as Bob turns back to the window.)

STEWARDESS: Yes, Mr. Wilson?

(Bob doesn't respond. He's staring out the window at the empty wing.)

STEWARDESS: Can I help you, Mr. Wilson? Bob tries to regain his composure.

BOB: Are we going into a storm?

STEWARDESS: (smiles) Just a small one. Nothing to worry about.

(The stewardess walks off. Bob shuts his eyes and tries to get a grip.

BOB: (to Julia) Honey? Would you wake up please,honey?

(As he says this, the creature flies down to the wing and lands just behind one of the engines. Bob sees it as it lands and their eyes meet. Bob watches and winces as the creature saunters forward, sits casually astride an engine, and pokes curiously at the rapidly spinning propellers with its fingers.The creature backs away from the propellers and begins to pry up a cowling plate that covers the engine. Bob stares in horror as the creature easily pulls up the metal plate to reveal the hot, glowing engine underneath. As it does so, the creature shoots Bob a glance.)

(FADE OUT on a terrified Bob mouthing the word "No.")

SUSPENSE

END OF ACT ONE

ACT TWO

(FADE IN on the PLANE flying through dark storm clouds -- still more wind and rain and lightning and THUNDER.)

THUNDER

CUT TO: Bob trying to awaken Julia.

BOB: Honey... Julia, wake up.

Julia awakes with a start.

JULIA: What?

(Bob turns to the window just in time to see the creature take off into the air. Julia, of course, fails to see anything.)

JULIA: What are you looking at? Bob? Is it the storm? Does it bother you?

BOB: No. Honey, you remember what I told you before about seeing something outside?

JULIA: Yes.

BOB: Julia, there's a man out there.

(Julia gives Bob a blank, uncomprehending look. THUNDER roars.)

THUNDER STRIKES

BOB: I--I don't mean a man, I mean... I don't know what I mean. I mean, maybe a... what'd they call them during the war? You know, the p--pilots? Gremlins! Gremlins. You remember the stories of the...

(Julia just stares at him.)

BOB: Julia, don't look at me like that.

JULIA: Bob...

BOB: I am not imagining it. I'm not imagining it. He's out there.

(Julia glances at the window.)

BOB: Don't look. He's not there now. He... (realizes all too well how crazy this sounds) He jumps away whenever anyone might see him. Except me. Honey, he's there. I realize what this sounds like. Do I look insane?

JULIA: No, darling, no.

BOB: I know I had a mental breakdown. I know I had it in an airplane. I know it looks to you as if the same thing's happening again, but it isn't. I'm sure it isn't. Look, the reason I'm telling you this... isn't just to worry you. You notice I didn't tell you before.

JULIA: Well, I want you to tell me.

BOB: I didn't tell you before because I wasn't sure whether it was real or not. But I am sure now. It is real. There's a man out there. Or a ... a gremlin, or... whatever it... (almost laughs) If I described him to you, you'd really think I was gone.

JULIA: (already thinks he's gone) No, darling, it's all right. It's all right.

BOB: Julia, I know your intentions are good. I know you love me. And sympathize with me. But don't patronize me. I am not insane.

JULIA: Did I say --?

BOB: Does it have to be said? It's in your face, in your--Look, for the last time, that creature's out there. And the reason I'm telling you is, he's starting to tamper with one of the engines. Look, look. Look. Think anything you want. Think I belong in a straitjacket, if it pleases you.

JULIA: If it pleases me!?

BOB: No, no, I-I-I-I didn't mean that. What I mean is, whatever you think of me--that I'm losing my mind, anything -- all I'm asking you to do is to tell the pilots what I've said. Ask them to keep an eye on the wings. If they see nothing... All right. All right, then I'll... commit myself. But if they do...

(Julia tries very hard not to look at Bob as if he were a madman.)

BOB: Won't you even allow the possibility--?

JULIA: I'll tell them.

BOB: I know it's asking a lot. I-- I-i-it's like asking you to... advertise your marriage to a lunatic.

JULIA: No, I'll tell them. You just sit tight and I'll go tell them.

(Julia unbuckles her seat, rises, heads down the aisle to the cockpit door, and urgently KNOCKS.)

DOOR KNOCK

(The stewardess rushes to her from the rear of the plane.)

STEWARDESS: Mrs. Wilson, what's the problem? May I help you?

JULIA: Oh--oh, yes, my husband wants to see the flight engineer.

STEWARDESS: All right, if you'll stay right here, I'll have him see you.

JULIA: Oh, thank you, it's very important.

(Still in his seat, Bob glances out the window just as the gremlin lands on the wing.)

JULIA: (to the stewardess) Hurry, please.

(Bob watches the creature as it reaches to pry up the cowling plate again.)

BOB: (to Julia) Hurry! Hurry!

(The flight engineer stands talking with Julia at the cockpit door. He rushes over to Bob. Julia follows.)

BOB: (to the flight engineer) He's out there!

FLIGHT ENGINEER: What's going on?

BOB: He's pulling up one of the cowling plates.

FLIGHT ENGINEER: He?

BOB: Didn't my wife--? There's a man out there!

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Listen, keep your voice down.

BOB: I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I--I--I--

FLIGHT ENGINEER: I don't know what's going on here.

BOB: Will you look?

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Mr. Wilson, I'm warning you.

BOB: Will you please look? In the name of --

(Bob, Julia and the flight engineer all peer out the window at the empty wing. The cowling plate appears untouched. A long pause.)

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Well?

BOB: Oh, now wait a minute. I saw him pull that plate up....

(Julia and the flight engineer just look at Bob with blank stares.)

BOB: (insistent) I said, I saw him pull that plate up.

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Mr. Wilson, please. All right, you saw him, but there are other people aboard. We mustn't alarm them.

BOB: (surprised) You mean you've seen him too?

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Of course we have. But we don't want to frighten the passengers. You can understand that?

BOB: Of course... (Bob suddenly realizes he's being humored) I understand.

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Now, the thing we gotta remember...

BOB: (darkly) You can stop now.

JULIA: Bob!

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Sir...

BOB: Get out of here.

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Mr. Wilson...

BOB: I said, you can stop.

JULIA: Honey, what is it?

BOB: (turns away from them) I won't say another word. I'll see us crash first.

JULIA: Bob!

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Mr. Wilson, try to understand our position.

JULIA: Honey, I'll be right back.

(Julia and the flight engineer head to the back of the plane, leaving Bob to bang his fists into his temples.)

BOB: (whispers to himself) He did pull it up. He did.

(In the rear of the cabin, the flight engineer hands Julia some pills--sedatives. Meanwhile, Bob watches as, once again, the gremlin pulls up the cowling plate. Bob looks back at Julia, realizes he can't say anything, and pounds his fist into his chair. Julia starts to walk back down the aisle to Bob. Bob turns back to the window to see the gremlin, on cue, playfully stick out its arms and fly away. Julia sits down next to Bob.)

JULIA: Honey, I was going to tell them when you--

BOB: Were you?

(Julia hands Bob the sedative and a cup of water.

BOB: For me?

JULIA: Please, Bob.

(Bob puts the pill in his mouth and drinks the water.)

JULIA: You'll sleep--you'll sleep now, darling. Hm?

BOB: Sure.

(The two of them lean back in their chairs and an uneasy silence ensues. Bob closes his eyes. A deeply concerned Julia gazes at him. The flight engineer makes his way down the aisle and confers with the stewardess.)

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Oh, boy.

STEWARDESS: What'd you do? Get his wife to givehim one of those pills?

FLIGHT ENGINEER: He'll be out for hours.

STEWARDESS: Well, I hope so, the way the storm's coming up.

FLIGHT ENGINEER: Don't worry, Betty, everything's fine.

STEWARDESS: I hope so.

(The stewardess heads for the rear. The flight engineer heads for the cockpit. Julia sleeps. Bob sleeps. Ah, but he only appears to sleep. He opens his eyes and looks out the window. Nothing. He puts his hand to his mouth and removes the unswallowed sedative from his cheek -- just as the gremlin flies down to the wing. Bob reacts by throwing the sedative on the floor in disgust.)

(The gremlin immediately pries up the cowling plate and starts tinkering with the engine. Bob looks around the cabin helplessly. Suddenly, his eye falls on the holstered gun of the policeman, who sleeps in an aisle seat, a few rows behind Bob. Bob formulates a plan.)

SUSPENSE

(He unbuckles his seat belt, rises, and slowly walks down the aisle toward the sleeping policeman, clearly intending to steal the gun. But before Bob can reach the seat, the policeman shifts his arm, covering the holster. Bob backs off, turns, and pulls out his pack of cigarettes. The policeman moves his arm off the gun and Bob makes his move.)

(Pretending to drop the cigarettes in the aisle next to the policeman, Bob kneels down and recovers the pack, then gently lifts the gun out of the holster, and hides it in his jacket. Quickly returning to his seat, Bob draws the gun, and then stops. The gremlin continues its interminable sabotage operation on the engine. Bob realizes he can't shoot through the plane window. He sees the auxiliary exit handle and knows he must open the door to get a clear shot. He pockets the weapon and buckles himself in. He is about to draw the gun when he thinks of Julia's safety.)

BOB: Honey? Honey, would you get me a glass of water, please?

(Julia wakes up with a start, surprised to find Bob wide awake.)

BOB: A glass of water. Please? Hurry.

(Without a word, a confused Julia heads for the rear of the plane and talks with the stewardess. Seeing that she's safely in the rear of the plane, Bob draws the gun, releases its safety catch, removes the plastic guard from the auxiliary exit handle, takes one last look around, notes the location of the gremlin--still leaning over the engine--and, steeling himself, releases the emergency door. The door flies off instantly and Bob is nearly sucked out, his seat belt barely securing him to the plane.)

HOWLING WIND

Julia, the stewardess, and everybody else in the cabin start SCREAMING.

CROWD SCREAMING

(Bob, in excruciating pain--half in his seat and halfway out the door--is pressed against the outside of the airplane by the tremendous wind, trying to get a two-fisted grip on the gun and bring it to bear on the gremlin. The startled creature stands a few feet away and starts walking toward Bob. Slowly, Bob struggles to aim the weapon. The creature is closing in. With a Herculean effort, Bob aims and fires, emptying the gun into the gremlin.)

GUN SHOTS

(It topples backward onto the wing. After the sixth shot, Bob lets go of the gun and SCREAMS.)

(CUT TO: The inside of the nearly empty CABIN, sometime later that night. All is quiet. The policeman puts his hat on. A peaceful, smiling Bob, straitjacketed and strapped to a stretcher, is carried down the aisle and out of the plane by two attendants.)

(CUT TO: An airport RUNWAY at night, seconds later. The plane is on the ground. The storm is over. The policeman silently leads the stretcher-bearers and Julia off the plane to a waiting ambulance and police car. The police RADIO chatters. The flight engineer and the stewardess watch the preparations to load Bob into the ambulance.)

POLICE RADIO

FLIGHT ENGINEER: (to the stewardess) Nuttiest way of trying to commit suicide I've ever heard of.

(Julia stands over the stretcher, comforting Bob.)

JULIA: (to Bob) It's all right now, darling.

(A triumphant Bob struggles to sit upright.)

BOB: I know. But I'm the only one who does know... right now.

(Tired but happy, Bob lies back down. The attendants lift him into the ambulance.)

NARRATOR (V.O.): The flight of Mr. Robert Wilson has ended now, a flight not only from point A to point B, but also from the fear of recurring mental breakdown. Mr. Wilson has that fear no longer...

(Slow PAN from the ambulance to the plane's wing, where the pried-up cowling plate is plainly visible.)

NARRATOR (V.O.) ...though, for the moment, he is, as he has said, alone in this assurance. Happily, his conviction will not remain isolated too much longer, for happily, tangible manifestation is very often left as evidence of trespass, even from so intangible a quarter as the Twilight Zone.

FADE OUT

TWILIGHT ZONE THEME

Seat belt, please," said the stewardess cheerfully as she passed him.

Almost as she spoke, the sign above the archway which led to the forward compartment lit up--fasten seat belt--with, below, its attendant caution--NO smoking. Drawing in a deep lungful, Wilson exhaled it in bursts, then pressed the cigarette into the armrest tray with irritable stabbing motions.

Outside, one of the engines coughed monstrously, spewing out a cloud of fume which fragmented into the night air. The fuselage began to shudder and Wilson, glancing through the window, saw the exhaust of flame jetting whitely from the engine's nacelle. The second engine coughed, then roared, its propeller instantly a blur of revolution. With a tense submissiveness, Wilson fastened the belt across his lap.

Now all the engines were running and Wilson's head throbbed in unison with the fuselage. He sat rigidly, staring at the seat ahead as the DC-7 taxied across the apron, heating the night with the thundering blast of its exhausts.

At the edge of the runway, it halted. Wilson looked out through the window at the leviathan glitter of the terminal. By late morning, he thought, showered and cleanly dressed, he would be sitting in the office of one more contact discussing one more specious deal the net result of which would not add one jot of meaning to the history of mankind. It was all so damned--

Wilson gasped as the engines began their warm-up race preparatory to takeoff. The sound, already loud, became deafening-waves of sound that crashed against Wilson's ears like club blows. He opened his mouth as if to let it drain. His eyes took on the glaze of a suffering man, his hands drew in like tensing claws.

He started, legs retracting, as he felt a touch on his arm. Jerking aside his head, he saw the stewardess who had met him at the door. She was smiling down at him.

"Are you all right?" he barely made out her words.

Wilson pressed his lips together and agitated his hand at her as if pushing her away. Her smile flared into excess brightness, then fell as she turned and moved away.

The plane began to move. At first lethargically, like some behemoth struggling to overthrow the pull of its own weight. Then with more speed, forcing off the drag of friction. Wilson, turning to the window, saw the dark runway rushing by faster and faster. On the wing edge, there was a mechanical whining as the flaps descended. Then, imperceptibly, the giant wheels lost contact with the ground, the earth began to fall away. Trees flashed underneath, buildings, the darting quicksilver of car lights. The DC-7 banked slowly to the right, pulling itself upward toward the frosty glitter of the stars.

Finally, it levelled off and the engines seemed to stop until Wilson's adjusting ear caught the murmur of their cruising speed. A moment of relief slackened his muscles, imparting a sense of well-being. Then it was gone. Wilson sat immobile, staring at the NO SMOKING sign until it winked out, then, quickly, lit a cigarette. Reaching into the seat-back pocket in front of him, he slid free his newspaper.

As usual, the world was in a state similar to his. Friction in diplomatic circles, earthquakes and gunfire, murder, rape, tornadoes and collisions, business conflicts, gangsterism. God's in his heaven, all's right with the world, thought Arthur Jeffrey Wilson.

Fifteen minutes later, he tossed the paper aside. His stomach felt awful. He glanced up at the signs beside the two lavatories. Both, illuminated, read OCCUPIED. He pressed out his third cigarette since takeoff and, turning off the overhead light, stared out through the window.

Along the cabin's length, people were already flicking out their lights and reclining their chairs for sleep. Wilson glanced at his watch. Eleven-twenty. He blew out tired breath. As he'd anticipated, the pills he'd taken before boarding hadn't done a bit of good.

He stood abruptly as the woman came out of the lavatory and, snatching up his bag, he started down the aisle.

His system, as expected, gave no cooperation. Wilson stood with a tired moan and adjusted his clothing. Having washed his hands and face, he removed the toilet kit from the bag and squeezed a filament of paste across his toothbrush.

As he brushed, one hand braced for support against the cold bulkhead, he looked out through the port. Feet away was the pale blue of the inboard propeller. Wilson visualized what would happen if it were to tear loose and, like a tri-bladed cleaver, come slicing in at him.

There was a sudden depression in his stomach. Wilson swallowed instinctively and got some paste-stained saliva down his throat. Gagging, he turned and spat into the sink, then, hastily, washed out his mouth and took a drink. Dear God, if only he could have gone by train; had his own compartment, taken a casual stroll to the club car, settled down in an easy chair with a drink and a magazine. But there was no such time or fortune in this world.

He was about to put the toilet kit away when his gaze caught on the oilskin envelope in the bag. He hesitated, then, setting the small briefcase on the sink, drew out the envelope and undid it on his lap.

He sat staring at the oil-glossed symmetry of the pistol. He'd carried it around with him for almost a year now. Originally, when he'd thought about it, it was in terms of money carried, protection from holdup, safety from teenage gangs in the cities he had to attend. Yet, far beneath, he'd always known there was no valid reason except one. A reason he thought more of every day. How simple it would be--here, now--

Wilson shut his eyes and swallowed quickly. He could still taste the toothpaste in his mouth, a faint nettling of peppermint on the buds. He sat heavily in the throbbing chill of the lavatory, the oily gun resting in his hands. Until, quite suddenly, he began to shiver without control. God, let me go! his mind cried out abruptly.

"Let me go, let me go." He barely recognized the whimpering in his ears.

Abruptly, Wilson sat erect. Lips pressed together, he rewrapped the pistol and thrust it into his bag, putting the briefcase on top of it, zipping the bag shut. Standing, he opened the door and stepped outside, hurrying to his seat and sitting down, sliding the overnight bag precisely into place. He indented the armrest button and pushed himself back. He was a business man and there was business to be conducted on the morrow. It was as simple as that. The body needed sleep, he would give it sleep.

Twenty minutes later, Wilson reached down slowly and depressed the button, sitting up with the chair, his face a mask of vanquished acceptance. Why fight it? he thought. It was obvious he was going to stay awake. So that was that.

He had finished half of the crossword puzzle before he let the paper drop to his lap. His eyes were too tired. Sitting up, he rotated his shoulders, stretching the muscles of his back. Now what? he thought. He didn't want to read, he couldn't sleep. And there were still--he checked his watch--seven to eight hours left before Los Angeles was reached. How was he to spend them? He looked along the cabin and saw that, except for a single passenger in the forward compartment, everyone was asleep.

A sudden, overwhelming fury filled him and he wanted to scream, to throw something, to hit somebody. Teeth jammed together so rabidly it hurt his jaws, Wilson shoved aside the curtains with a spastic hand and stared out murderously through the window.

Outside, he saw the wing lights blinking off and on, the lurid flashes of exhaust from the engine cowlings. Here he was, he thought; twenty-thousand feet above the earth, trapped in a howling shell of death, moving through polar night toward--

Wilson twitched as lightning bleached the sky, washing its false daylight across the wing. He swallowed. Was there going to be a storm? The thought of rain and heavy winds, of the plane a chip in the sea of sky was not a pleasant one. Wilson was a bad flyer. Excess motion always made him ill. Maybe he should have taken another few Dramamines to be on the safe side. And, naturally, his seat was next to the emergency door. He thought about it opening accidentally; about himself sucked from the plane, falling, screaming.

Wilson blinked and shook his head. There was a faint tingling at the back of his neck as he pressed close to the window and stared out. He sat there motionless, squinting. He could have sworn--

Suddenly, his stomach muscles jerked in violently and he felt his eyes strain forward. There was something crawling on the wing.

Wilson felt a sudden, nauseous tremor in his stomach. Dear God, had some dog or cat crawled onto the plane before takeoff and, in some way managed to hold on? It was a sickening thought. The poor animal would be deranged with terror. Yet, how, on the smooth, wind-blasted surface, could it possibly discover gripping places? Surely that was impossible. Perhaps, after all, it was only a bird or--

The lightning flared and Wilson saw that it was a man.

He couldn't move. Stupefied, he watched the black form crawling down the wing. Impossible. Somewhere, cased in layers of shock, a voice declared itself but Wilson did not hear. He was conscious of nothing but the titanic, almost muscle tearing leap of his heart--and of the man outside. Suddenly, like ice-filled water thrown across him, there was a reaction; his mind sprang for the shelter of explanation. A mechanic had, through some incredible oversight, been taken up with the ship and had managed to cling to it even though the wind had torn his clothes away, even though the air was thin and close to freezing. Wilson gave himself no time for refutation. Jarring to his feet, he shouted: "Stewardess! Stewardess!" his voice a hollow, ringing sound in the cabin. He pushed the button for her with a jabbing finger.

"Stewardess!"

She came running down the aisle, her face tightened with alarm. When she saw the look on his face, she stiffened in her tracks. "There's a man out there! A man!" cried Wilson. "What?" Skin constricted on her cheeks, around her eyes. "Look, look!" Hand shaking, Wilson dropped back into his seat and pointed out the window. "He's crawling on the--" The words ended with a choking rattle in his throat. There was nothing on the wing.

Wilson sat there trembling. For a while, before he turned back, he looked at the reflection of the stewardess on the window. There was a blank expression on her face.

At last, he turned and looked up at her. He saw her red lips part as though she meant to speak but she said nothing, only placing the lips together again and swallowing. An attempted smile distended briefly at her features.

"I'm sorry," Wilson said. "It must have been a--"

He stopped as though the sentence were completed. Across the aisle a teenage girl was gaping at him with sleepy curiosity. The stewardess cleared her throat. "Can I get you anything?" she asked. "A glass of water," Wilson said.

The stewardess turned and moved back up the aisle.

Wilson sucked in a long breath of air and turned away from the young girl's scrutiny. He felt the same. That was the thing that shocked him most. Where were the visions, the cries, the pummelling of fists on temples, the tearing out of hair?

Abruptly he closed his eyes. There had been a man, he thought. There had, actually, been a man. That's why he felt the same. And yet, there couldn't have been. He knew that clearly.

Wilson sat with his eyes closed, wondering what Jacqueline would be doing now if she were in the seat beside him. Would she be silent, shocked beyond speaking? Or would she, in the more accepted manner, be fluttering around him, smiling, chattering, pretending that she hadn't seen? What would his sons think? Wilson felt a dry sob threatening in his chest. Oh, God--

"Here's your water, sir."

Twitching sharply, Wilson opened his eyes.

"Would you like a blanket?" inquired the stewardess.

"No." He shook his head. "Thank you," he added, wondering why he was being so polite.

"If you need anything, just ring," she said. Wilson nodded.

Behind him, as he sat with the untouched cup of water in his hand, he heard the muted voices of the stewardess and one of the passengers. Wilson tightened with resentment. Abruptly, he reached down and, careful not to spill the water, pulled out the overnight bag. Unzipping it, he removed the box of sleeping capsules and washed two of them down. Crumpling the empty cup, he pushed it into the seat-pocket in front of him, then, not looking, slid the curtains shut. There--it was ended. One hallucination didn't make insanity.

Wilson turned onto his right side and tried to set himself against the fitful motion of the ship. He had to forget about this, that was the most important thing. He mustn't dwell on it. Unexpectedly, he found a wry smile forming on his lips. Well, by God, no one could accuse him of mundane hallucinations anyway. When he went at it, he did a royal job. A naked man crawling down a DC-7's wing at twenty-thousand feet, there was a chimera worthy of the noblest lunatic.

The humour faded quickly. Wilson felt chilled. It had been so clear, so vivid. How could the eyes see such a thing when it did not exist? How could what was in his mind make the physical act of seeing work to its purpose so completely? He hadn't been groggy, in a daze--nor had it been a shapeless, gauzy vision. It had been sharply three-dimensional, fully a part of the things he saw which he knewwere real. That was the frightening part of it. It had not been dreamlike in the least. He had looked at the wing and--

Impulsively, Wilson drew aside the curtain.

He did not know, immediately, if he would survive. It seemed as if all the contents of his chest and stomach were bloating horribly, the excess pushing up into his throat and head, choking away breath, pressing out his eyes. Imprisoned in this swollen mass, his heart pulsed strickenly, threatening to burst its case as Wilson sat, paralyzed.

Only inches away, separated from him by the thickness of a piece of glass, the man was staring at him.

It was a hideously malignant face, a face not human. Its skin was grimy, of a wide pored coarseness; its nose a squat, discoloured lump; its lips misshapen, cracked, forced apart by teeth of a grotesque size and crookedness; its eyes recessed and small--unblinking. All framed by shaggy, tangled hair which sprouted, too, in furry tufts from the man's ears and nose, birdlike, down across his cheeks.

Wilson sat riven to his chair, incapable of response. Time stopped and lost its meaning. Function and analysis ceased. All were frozen in an ice of shock. Only the beat of heart went on--alone, a frantic leaping in the darkness. Wilson could not so much as blink. Dull-eyed, breathless, he returned the creature's vacant stare.

Abruptly then, he closed his eyes and his mind, rid of the sight, broke free. It isn't there, he thought. He pressed his teeth together, breath quavering in his nostrils. It isn't there, it simply is not their!.

Clutching at the armrests with pale-knuckled fingers, Wilson braced himself. There is no man out there, he told himself. It was impossible that there should be a man out there crouching on the wing looking at him.

He opened his eyes--to shrink against the seat back with a gagging inhalation. Not only was the man still there but he was grinning. Wilson turned his fingers in and dug the nails into his palms until pain flared. He kept it there until there was no doubt in his mind that he was fully conscious.

Then, slowly, arm quivering and numb, Wilson reached up for the button which would summon the stewardess. He would not make the same mistake again--cry out, leap to his feet, alarm the creature into flight. He kept reaching upward, a tremor of aghast excitement in his muscles now because the man was watching him, the small eyes shifting with the movement of his arm.

He pressed the button carefully once, twice. Now come, he thought. Come with your objective eyes and see what I see--but hurry. In the rear of the cabin, he heard a curtain being drawn aside and, suddenly, his body stiffened. The man had turned his caliban head to look in that

direction. Paralyzed, Wilson stared at him. Hurry, he thought. For God's sake, hurry! It was over in a second. The man's eyes shifted back to Wilson, across his lips a smile of monstrous cunning. Then with a leap, he was gone. "Yes, sir?"

For a moment, Wilson suffered the fullest anguish of madness. His gaze kept jumping from the spot where the man had stood to the stewardess's questioning face, then back again. Back to the stewardess, to the wing, to the stewardess, his breath caught, his eyes stark with dismay.

"What is it?" asked the stewardess. It was the look on her face that did it. Wilson closed a vice on his emotions. She couldn't possibly believe him. He realized it in an instant. "I'm--I'm sorry," he faltered. He swallowed so dryly that it made a clicking noise in his throat. "It's nothing. I--apologize." The stewardess obviously didn't know what to say. She kept leaning against the erratic yawing of the ship, one hand holding on to the back of the seat

beside Wilson's, the other stirring limply along the seam of her skirt. Her lips were parted slightly as if she meant to speak but could not find the words. "Well," she said finally and cleared her throat, "if you--need anything." "Yes, yes. Thank you. Are we--going into a storm?" The stewardess smiled hastily. "Just a small one," she said. "Nothing to worry about."

Wilson nodded with little twitching movements. Then, as the stewardess turned away, breathed in suddenly, his nostrils flaring. He felt certain that she already thought him mad but didn't know what to do about it because, in her course of training, there had been no instruction on the handling of passengers who thought they saw small men crouching on the wing. Thought?

Wilson turned his head abruptly and looked outside. He stared at the dark rise of the wing, the spouting flare of the exhausts, the blinking lights. He'd seen the man--to that he'd swear. How could he be completely aware of everything around him--be, in all ways, sane and still imagine such a thing? Was it logical that the mind, in giving way, should, instead of distorting all reality, insert, within the still intact arrangement of details, one extraneous sight?

No, not logical at all.

Suddenly, Wilson thought about war, about the newspaper stories which recounted the alleged existence of creatures in the sky who plagued the Allied pilots in their duties. They called them gremlins, he remembered. Were there, actually, such beings? Did they, truly, exist up here, never falling, riding on the wind, apparently of bulk and weight, yet impervious to gravity?

He was thinking that when the man appeared again. One second the wing was empty. The next, with an arcing descent, the man came jumping down to it. There seemed no impact. He landed almost

fragilely, short, hairy arms outstretched as if for balance. Wilson tensed. Yes, there was knowledge in his look. The man--was he to think of it as a man?--somehow understood that he had tricked Wilson into calling the stewardess in vain. Wilson felt himself tremble with alarm. How could he prove the man's existence to others? He looked around desperately. That girl across the aisle. If he spoke to her softly, woke her up, would she be able to--

No, the man would jump away before she could see. Probably to the top of the fuselage where no one could see him, not even the pilots in their cockpit. Wilson felt a sudden burst of self-condemnation that he hadn't gotten that camera Walter had asked for. Dear Lord, he thought, to be able to take a picture of the man.

He leaned in close to the window. What was the man doing?

Abruptly, darkness seemed to leap away as the wing was chalked with lightning and Wilson saw. Like an inquisitive child, the man was squatted on the hitching wing edge, stretching out his right hand toward one of the whirling propellers.

As Wilson watched, fascinatedly appalled, the man's hand drew closed and closer to the blurring gyre until, suddenly, it jerked away and the man's lips twitched back in a soundless cry. He's lost a finger! Wilson thought, sickened. But, immediately, the man reached forward again, gnarled finger extended, the picture of some monstrous infant trying to capture the spin of a fan blade.

If it had not been so hideously out of place it would have been amusing for, objectively seen, the man, at; that moment, was a comic sight--a fairy tale troll somehow come to life, wind whipping at the hair across his head and body, all of his attention centred on the turn of the propeller. How could this be madness? Wilson suddenly thought. What self-revelation could this farcical little horror possibly bestow on him?

Again and again, as Wilson watched, the man reached forward. Again and again jerked back his fingers, sometimes, actually, putting them in his mouth as if to cool them. And, always, apparently checking, he kept glancing back across at his shoulder looking at Wilson. He knows, thought Wilson. Knows that this is a game between us. If I am able to get someone else to see him, then he loses. If I am the only witness, then he wins. The sense of faint amusement was gone now. Wilson clenched his teeth. Why in hell didn't the pilots see!

Now the man, no longer interested in the propeller, was settling himself across the engine cowling like a man astride a bucking horse. Wilson stared at him. Abruptly a shudder plaited down his back. The little man was picking at the plates that sheathed the engine, trying to get his nails beneath them.

Impulsively, Wilson reached up and pushed the button for the stewardess. In the rear of the cabin, he heard her coming and, for a second, thought he'd fooled the man, who seemed absorbed with his efforts. At the last moment, however, just before the stewardess arrived, the man glanced over at Wilson. Then, like a marionette jerked upward from its stage by wires, he was flying up into the air.

"Yes?" She looked at him apprehensively. "Will you--sit down, please?" he asked. She hesitated. "Well, I--" "Please."

She sat down gingerly on the seat beside his. "What is it, Mr. Wilson?" she asked. He braced himself. "That man is still outside," he said.

The stewardess stared at him. "The reason I'm telling you this," Wilson hurried on, "is that he's starting to tamper with one of the engines." She turned her eyes instinctively toward the window. "No, no, don't look," he told her. "He isn't there now." He cleared his throat viscidly. "He-jumps away whenever you come here." A sudden nausea gripped him as he realized what she must be thinking. As he realized what he, himself, would think if someone told him such a story, a

wave of dizziness seemed to pass across him and he thought--I am going mad! "The point is this," he said, fighting off the thought. "If I'm not imagining this thing, the ship is in danger." "Yes," she said. "I know," he said. "You think I've lost my mind." "Of course not," she said. "All I ask is this," he said, struggling against the rise of anger. "Tell the pilots what I've said. Ask them to keep an eye on the wings. If they see nothing--all right. But if they do--" The stewardess sat there quietly, looking at him. Wilson's hands curled into fists that trembled in his lap.

"Well?" he asked. She pushed to her feet. "I'll tell them," she said.

Turning away, she moved along the aisle with a movement that was, to Wilson, poorly contrived--too fast to be normal yet, clearly, held back as if to reassure him that she wasn't fleeing. He felt his stomach churning as he looked out at the wing again.

Abruptly, the man appeared again, landing on the wing like some grotesque ballet dancer. Wilson watched him as he set to work again, straddling the engine casing with his thick, bare legs and picking at the plates.

Well, what was he so concerned about? thought Wilson. That miserable creature couldn't pry up rivets with his fingernails. Actually, it didn't matter if the pilots saw him or not--at least as far as the safety of the plane was concerned. As for his own personal reasons--

It was at that moment that the man pried up one edge of a plate. Wilson gasped. "Here, quickly!" he shouted, noticing, up ahead, the stewardess and the pilot coming through the cockpit doorway. The pilot's eyes jerked up to look at Wilson, then abruptly, he was pushing past the stewardess and lurching up the aisle.

"Hurry!" Wilson cried. He glanced out the window in time to see the man go leaping upward. That didn't matter now. There would be evidence. "What's going on?" the pilot asked, stopping breathlessly beside his seat. "He's torn up one of the engine plates!" said Wilson in a shaking voice. "He's what?"

"The man outside!" said Wilson. "I tell you he's--!" "Mister Wilson, keep your voice down!" ordered the pilot. Wilson's jaw went slack. "I don't know what's going on here," said the pilot, "but--" "Will you look?!" shouted Wilson. "Mister Wilson, I'm warning you."

"For God's sake!" Wilson swallowed quickly, trying to repress the blinding rage he felt. Abruptly, he pushed back against his seat and pointed at the window with a palsied hand. "Will you, for God's sake, look?" he asked.

Drawing in an agitated breath, the pilot bent over. In a moment, his gaze shifted coldly to Wilson's. "Well?" he asked. Wilson jerked his head around. The plates were in their normal position. "Oh, now wait," he said before the dread could come. "I saw him pry that plate up." "Mister Wilson, if you don't--"

"I said I saw him pry it up," said Wilson. The pilot stood there looking at him in the same withdrawn, almost aghast way as the stewardess had. Wilson shuddered violently. "Listen, I saw him!" he cried. The sudden break in his voice appalled him. In a second, the pilot was down beside him. "Mister Wilson, please," he said. "All right, you saw him. But remember there are other people aboard. We mustn't alarm them." Wilson was too shaken to understand at first.

"You--mean you've seen him then?" he asked. "Of course," the pilot said, "but we don't want to frighten the passengers. You can understand that." "Of course, of course, I don't want to--" Wilson felt a spastic coiling in his groin and lower stomach. Suddenly, he pressed his lips together and looked at the pilot with malevolent eyes. "I understand," he said. "The thing we have to remember--" began the pilot. "We can stop now," Wilson said. "Sir?" Wilson shuddered. "Get out of here," he said. "Mister Wilson, what--?"

"Will you stop?" Face whitening, Wilson turned from the pilot and stared out at the wing, eyes like stone. He glared back suddenly. "Rest assured I'd not say another word!" he snapped. "Mr. Wilson, try to understand our--"

Wilson twisted away and stared out venomously at the engine. From a corner of his vision, he saw two passengers standing in the aisle looking at him. Idiots! his mind exploded. He felt his hands begin to tremble and, for a few seconds, was afraid that he was going to vomit. It's the motion, he told himself. The plane was bucking in the air now like a storm-tossed boat.

He realized that the pilot was still talking to him and, refocusing his eyes, he looked at the man's reflection in the window. Beside him, mutely sombre, stood the stewardess. Blind idiots, both of them, thought Wilson. He did not indicate his notice of their departure. Reflected on the window, he saw them heading toward the rear of the cabin. They'll be discussing me now, he thought. Setting up plans in case I grow violent.

He wished now that the man would reappear, pull off the cowling plate and ruin the engine. It gave him a sense of vengeful pleasure to know that only he stood between catastrophe and the more than thirty people aboard. If he chose, he could allow that catastrophe to take place. Wilson smiled without humour. There would be a royal suicide, he thought.

The little man dropped down again and Wilson saw that what he'd thought was correct--the man had pressed the plate back into place before jumping away. For, now, he was prying it up again and it was raising easily, peeling back like skin excised by some grotesque surgeon. The motion of the wing was very broken but the man seemed to have no difficulty staying balanced.

Once more Wilson felt panic. What was he to do? No one believed him. If he tried to convince them any more they'd probably restrain him by force. If he asked the stewardess to sit by him it would be, at best, only a momentary reprieve. The second she departed or, remaining, fell asleep, the man would return. Even if she stayed awake beside him, what was to keep the man from tampering with the engines on the other wing? Wilson shuddered, a coldness of dread misting along his bones.

Dear God, there was nothing to be done.

He twitched as, across the window through which he watched the little man, the pilot's reflection passed. The insanity of the moment almost broke him- the man and the pilot within feet of each other, both seen by him yet not aware of one another. No, that was wrong. The little man had glanced across his shoulder as the pilot passed. As if he knew there was no need to leap off any more, that Wilson's capacity for interfering was at an end. Wilson suddenly trembled with mind-searing rage. I'll kill you! he thought! You filthy little animal, I'll kill you!

Outside, the engine faltered.

It lasted only for a second, but, in that second, it seemed to Wilson as if his heart had, also, stopped. He pressed against the window, staring. The man had bent the cowling plate far back and now was on his knees, poking a curious hand into the engine.

"Don't," Wilson heard the whimper of his own voice begging. "Don't.

Again, the engine failed. Wilson looked around in horror. Was everyone deaf? He raised his hand to press the button for the stewardess, then jerked it back. No, they'd lock him up, restrain him somehow. And he was the only one who knew what was happening, the only one who could help. "God..." Wilson bit his lower lip until the pain made him whimper. He twisted around again and jolted. The stewardess was hurrying down the rocking aisle. She'd heard it! He watched her fixedly and saw her glance at him as she passed his seat.

She stopped three seats down the aisle. Someone else had heard! Wilson watched the stewardess as she leaned over, talking to the unseen passenger. Outside, the engine coughed again. Wilson jerked his head around and looked out with horror pinched eyes. "Damn you!" he whined.

He turned again and saw the stewardess coming back up the aisle. She didn't look alarmed. Wilson stared at her with unbelieving eyes. It wasn't possible. He twisted around to follow her swaying movement and saw her turn in at the kitchen. "No." Wilson was shaking so badly now he couldn't stop. No one had heard.

No one knew. Suddenly, Wilson bent over and slid his overnight bag out from under the seat. Unzipping it, he jerked out his briefcase and threw it on the carpeting.

Then, reaching in again, he grabbed the oilskin envelope and straightened up. From the corners of his eyes, he saw the stewardess coming back and pushed the bag beneath the seat with his shoes, shoving the oilskin envelope beside himself. He sat there rigidly, breath quavering in his chest, as she went by.

Then he pulled the envelope into his lap and untied it. His movements were so feverish that he almost dropped the pistol.

He caught it by the barrel, then clutched at the stock with white knuckled fingers and pushed off the safety catch. He glanced outside and felt himself grow cold.

The man was looking at him.

Wilson pressed his shaking lips together. It was impossible that the man knew what he intended. He swallowed and tried to catch his breath. He shifted his gaze to where the stewardess was handing some pills to the passenger ahead, then looked back at the wing. The man was turning to the engine once again, reaching in. Wilson's grip tightened on the pistol. He began to raise it.

Suddenly, he lowered it. The window was too thick. The bullet might be deflected and kill one of the passengers. He shuddered and stared out at the little man. Again the engine failed and Wilson saw an eruption of sparks cast light across the man's animal features. He braced himself. There was only one answer.

He looked down at the handle of the emergency door. There was a transparent cover over it. Wilson pulled it free and dropped it. He looked outside. The man was still there, crouched and probing at the engine with his hand. Wilson sucked in trembling breath. He put his left hand on the door handle and tested. It wouldn't move downward. Upward there was play.

Abruptly, Wilson let go and put the pistol in his lap. No time for argument, he told himself. With shaking hands, he buckled the belt across his thighs. When the door was opened, there would be a tremendous rushing out of air. For the safety of the ship, he must not go with it.

Now. Wilson picked the pistol up again, his heartbeat staggering. He'd have to be sudden, accurate. If he missed, the man might jump onto the other wing--worse, onto the tail assembly where, inviolate, he could rupture wires, mangle flaps, destroy the balance of the ship. No, this was the only way. He'd fire low and try to hit the man in the chest or stomach. Wilson filled his lungs with air. Now, he thought. Now.

The stewardess came up the aisle as Wilson started pulling at the handle. For a moment, frozen in her steps, she couldn't speak. A look of stupefied horror distended her features and she raised one hand as if imploring him. Then, suddenly, her voice was shrilling above the noise of the engines. "Mr. Wilson, no!"

"Get back!" cried Wilson and he wrenched the handle up.

The door seemed to disappear. One second it was by him, in his grip. The next, with a hissing roar, it was gone.

In the same instant, Wilson felt himself enveloped by a monstrous suction which tried to tear him from his seat. His head and shoulders left the cabin and, suddenly, he was breathing tenuous, freezing air. For a moment, eardrums almost bursting from the thunder of the engines, eyes blinded by the arctic winds, he forgot the man. It seemed he heard a prick of screaming in the maelstrom that surrounded him, a distant shout.

Then Wilson saw the man. He was walking across the wing, gnarled form leaning forward, talon twisted hands outstretched in eagerness. Wilson flung his arm up, fired. The explosion was like a popping in the roaring violence of the air. The man staggered, lashed out and Wilson felt a streak of pain across his head. He fired again at immediate range and saw the man go flailing backward--then, suddenly, disappear with no more solidity than a paper doll swept in a gale. Wilson felt a bursting numbness in his brain. He felt the pistol torn from failing fingers.

Then all was lost in winter darkness.

He stirred and mumbled. There was a warmness trickling in his veins, his limbs felt wooden. In the darkness, he could hear a shuffling sound, a delicate swirl of voices. He was lying, face up, on something--moving, joggling. A cold wind sprinkled on his face, he felt the surface tilt beneath him.

He sighed. The plane was landed and he was being carried off on a stretcher. His head wound, likely, plus an injection to quiet him. "Nuttiest way of tryin' to commit suicide I ever heard of," said a voice somewhere.

Wilson felt the pleasure of amusement. Whoever spoke was wrong, of course. As would be established soon enough when the engine was examined and they checked his wound more closely. Then they'd realize that he'd saved them all.

Wilson slept without dreams.

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