Taz and Kodak
Montana Sky
By:
Rick Beck
(© 2019 by the author)
Editor:
Jerry
The author retains all rights. No reproductions are allowed without the author's
consent. Comments are appreciated at...
beck@tickiestories.us
Chapter 2
Lost
Kodak sat on the sand,
nursing his sore shoulder and arm, as he regained his strength. It was his most
serious injury besides a knot on his forehead. They'd crashed in shallow water
within a hundred yards of the beach. Once he realized he couldn't get the dead
pilot out of the plane after the crash, he mostly floated on the water that
carried him to shore. He would have to wait and gain enough strength to return
for whatever he could salvage.
All his equipment had been wrapped in waterproof packaging before being loaded
on the first leg of the journey. His film was similarly wrapped to assure it
remained dry, even if dropped in water. The crash wasn't what came to mind when
Kodak was told his equipment could be dropped in water and remain dry. His
experienced definitely changed what being dropped in water might mean.
The pilot spotted the island as the plane's engines began to sputter. He'd
turned the craft hard to the left. apparently intending to use the beach as a
landing strip, only the final sputter from the engines came a few hundred yards
off shore. The plane tilted left just as it impacted the water. Kodak was
stunned for some time after the crash but he couldn't be sure for how long.
That's all Kodak remembered about the crash. He was more stunned than having any
permanent serious injury from the impact. The cool Pacific waters filling his
side of the plane revived him. The pilot's side was submerged, tilted downward.
Kodak's first instinct told him to free the pilot but by the time he finally
loosed himself from his constraints, there was no way the pilot could still be
alive. If Kodak didn't get out of the plane fast, he'd drown too. Somehow
getting his door open with his left hand, because his right arm had no feeling
in it, he let himself float out on the water as the cabin of the plane slipped
beneath the surface. The right wing was still out of the water for a time,
allowing him to steady himself to regain his senses before attempting to make it
to shore.
With his right arm still useless, he let the action of the waves carry him
toward shore. Standing to test his legs, he walked the final few yards,
collapsing on the beach from exhaustion. He slept on the sand. This was a blur
of details he put together, once he thought back on the crash and his escape
from the sinking plane.
The plane ended up just inside a small lagoon that protected the beach from the
ocean, except sometimes at high tide, the ocean and the lagoon became one. At
low tide Kodak found he could walk to within 50 yards of the wreckage in placid,
knee-deep water.
He felt too lucky to be alive to have regrets, but sitting alone on that tiny
strip of beach, he understood his decision to take the job also separated him
from the friend he depended upon to keep his life in balance.
This separation reminded him of when the army took Taz away, during what was
supposed to be a congressional reception to honor him. This was different and
yet, every bit as hard on Kodak, as that separation. He was glad to be alive. He
wasn't so glad to be facing an uncertain future alone.
Touring the States with Taz as the hero and he as his photographer, had them
depending on one another. That they spent all their time together for over a
year before Taz's breakdown had made his absence more significant. It was a
necessary separation, but none-the-less a crushing one for Kodak.
Before Taz's breakdown, soldiers told Kodak trouble was coming.
"Taking a man like Taz out of combat and away from the men he's protecting, even
if you put him in front of a friendly audience, won't end well."
Kodak learned what they meant. One instant they'd been stranded in the jungle in
the midst of the enemy, and the next minute it was ticker tape and steak
dinners. All of this because Kodak's first exposure to battle meant taking
pictures at a time when he was more scared then he'd ever been. Taking pictures
defeated his fear.
Those pictures captured a hero in action. Once published, Taz's story was told
and the army finally had a heroic face to put on the Vietnam war. It was a
stroke of genius, but their hero needed time to decompress. The army didn't have
time. Taz was immediately speaking about his tour of duty in Vietnam.
The tail of the plane was visible for the first two days. It slipped below the
surface as the wreckage settled on the third day, reappearing the next morning.
Kodak knew the plane couldn't be seen from the water and probably not from the
air unless someone was looking straight down into the lagoon from above.
The island was larger than it first appeared as they approached it from the air.
He'd found a fresh water spring the first day, not far off the beach. The water
ran down from someplace above. The fruit and coconuts seemed endless. Two
important resources were no more than a few minutes away.
The tricky part of a coconut was the husk; if you could find a way through the
thick fiber outer protection, the nut was yours for the taking. This was where
the machete mounted on the inside of the passenger door of the plane came in
handy. It made short work of getting to the inner nut and Kodak piled up a dozen
at a time to open later.
Kodak developed different techniques to open the coconuts, making a small hole
in the nut to drink the liquid and a larger hole to pick out the coconut's meat.
The machete and various stones gave him the tools to allow him to make the
opening he wanted.
Sitting on the narrow beach he spent time watching the plane's tail section
appear sometime in the morning and disappear later in the day. He didn't know
the time but it gave him an idea of how long he'd have to get anything useful
out of the plane.
Being well fed and getting the feeling back in his right arm, it took him until
the third day to start planning to reach the wreckage when the tide was at its
lowest, which would mean the least distance to swim. The following morning,
right after the tail section came into view, he set out to retrieve his camera
equipment first.
He entertained the idea of bringing the body of the pilot in for burial. He
decided leaving it strapped in the plane was best. At least there would be a
body to recover if someone came upon the island one day. He wasn't certain
something wouldn't dig up what he buried.
The first thing he needed to do was break open the crate that contained the
camera equipment. His camera case with camera was carefully wrapped separately
in its own plastic to keep it out of the weather on days when it stormed during
his island shoot. He was happy to have it back in his hands.
Several unexplored islands near the end of the Marshall Island chain were of
interest to Nature magazine. They'd been left to establish an ecology without
the influence of man for over a hundred years. Being as small as six miles long
and two miles wide, they couldn't sustain human habitation for many or for long.
Volcanic activity and the increasing size of storms in the region made such
islands less than ideal for habitation. Being relatively forgotten and a bit too
far for native islanders to access without a major effort, nature had been left
to set its own course.
Nature magazine wanted Kodak to capture on film what that meant to the monkeys,
birds, and reptiles native to the island. The editor of the magazine had seen
some of Kodak's pictures of the jungles of Vietnam and he was sure he'd found
the photographer he wanted. It took him some time to track him down.
Kodak was eager to photograph the colorful birds and spirited monkeys that were
abundant. He'd picked out a spot on the beach to watch island life before he
could retrieve his camera equipment. It gave him time to make a plan to keep
busy. This wasn't the island he was going to but it had all the features he
expected to find there.
The monkeys and birds were more curious about him, while the reptiles were less
than thrilled by the invader that spelled danger to them. Kodak kept his
distance for the first few days to let the island life become accustomed to the
latest arrival.
Alone, left to his own devices, he'd encounter danger, because no place came
without some kind of danger. Big fish weren't a great threat because the mouth
of the lagoon was in the shallows and he figured he was safe from sharks and
such, but that didn't mean he wouldn't be vigilant. There was always a chance of
something deadly coming into the lagoon when the ocean got angry and overtook
it.
He wanted to establish a camp as quickly as he was able, and see about
protecting himself from snakes and the larger lizards that stood off some
distance down the beach to watch him from time to time. These were scary
critters, making Kodak feel like he'd been dropped into the middle of a
prehistoric movie location, complete with dinosaurs.
It was the third day before he felt strong enough to start stripping the plane.
Opening the crate to retrieve his camera and some film was all he could do the
first day. He was exhausted by the time he pushed his tree trunk back to shore.
This chore was made more stressful because he hadn't yet learned to ignore the
pilot. At first half of his focus went to looking at the corpse and how best to
avoid looking at it. Even having seen war, death unnerved him and the pilot was
very dead.
Cutting his first visit short, after getting the crate with his camera equipment
open, made it easier on him. He still wasn't strong enough to make a major
effort, and until he was he'd go slow.
The following day he went with the idea of retrieving his suitcase. Once again,
it wasn't too much of a strain on his sore body. He hung out his clothing,
except for the soft brim hat, letting it dry on his head, cutting the impact of
the hot tropical sun.
Most of the fifth day was spent going back and forth to the plane as low tide
came and went. Exhaustion was no longer a factor. He wasn't too tired to regain
his strength after a short rest. Then he made another dive. There were a lot of
things he could use and it was on this day he decided to get it done without
further delay.
He stretched his right arm, testing its strength. It felt stronger and for the
first time he was sure there was no damage beyond the serious bruises that made
life miserable for the first few days. The warm water and regular exercise
proved to be the best medicine.
His right side was one big bruise but the bruising had begun to lose its uglier
colors. His arm's soreness reminded him to take it easy and not rush. By the
sixth and seventh days he'd begun to enjoy the daily trips to the plane.
By this time Kodak talked to the pilot as he searched the plane for one more
useful item, holding his breath longer on each dive. He didn't look at the body
and wasn't able to call him by name, but he felt no presence. He talked to the
only person in his world, and a week after he'd begun diving on the wreckage,
everything that was of value to his survival was on shore.
He was sitting on the beach holding his knees, one day after the diving was
done, when the top of the tail of the plane, all that was visible of the plane
by then, did a slow motion turn. The plane slipped below the surface to settle
on the bottom of the lagoon. The tail section never appeared above the waterline
again.
Kodak knew how lucky he was to be alive. Had the plane settled to the bottom on
the first day, he'd never have been able to retrieve anything. There was some
comfort to seeing the tail sticking out of the water at some time during the
day, but less and less of it was visible each time. There was no particular
feeling of loss once it was gone for good.
It was what it was and he'd survived for a reason. It made no sense that he
survived the crash to be eaten by a lizard later. That didn't mean it couldn't
happen. He would do his best to see it didn't, so he could be around to see how
it all turned out. Until then, he wanted to take pictures, stay busy, until he
figured out what came next.
By the end of the first week on the island Kodak had walked the beach in both
directions, as far as he could go. It was then he turned his focus to moving up
and away from the beach. He was building his camp just inside the tree line for
the time being, collecting and storing a few days of food. Once this was taken
care of, he had time to explore and photograph the island's creatures and
landscapes.
He wanted to be able to negotiate the high ground in case of a serious storm. So
far every day had been warm and sunny, but this was the South Pacific and known
for intense storms. He needed a secondary camp that offered protection during
such an event.
He waited to begin his trek upward until he was sure he was able. On his first
day of climbing toward the top of the island, he left the camera safely hung in
the branches of a tree too small for monkey shines to dislodge it. For extra
safety he hung the sleeveless green fatigue jacket, which Taz had given him in
Vietnam, over the camera case. It was suspended five feet off the ground.
His main mission was to explore and blaze the easiest trail possible to the top.
He doubted there would be time to take many pictures and once he had an idea of
what he was dealing with, he could go back with the camera to capture whatever
he discovered.
He was forced to change course a few times. The machete came in handy against
the thick undergrowth, but even that became useless against the more dense parts
of the jungle. Any idea of clearing a direct route to the top was soon
abandoned.
Once he crossed the stream that fed the pool of fresh water, he tried to stay
close to it, but this too ended with him crossing it and then crossing back over
it to find some easy going. He spent time hacking into what looked like easier
passage, only to have it turn impassable, forcing him to backtrack to the stream
one more time.
As he climbed that first day, he made sure he always knew where the beach was.
He'd seen the entire island from the air the day of the crash. It didn't look
all that formidable at first glance, but the intense undergrowth made going
tough. He spent a lot of time keeping the stream within reach, knowing that it
went straight toward the beach below, where it emptied out into the lagoon.
The island environment reminded him of Vietnam and that got him thinking about
his friend Taz, as he made one false start and then another. Maybe because he
was allowing his mind to drift he became confused, but he was always able to
locate the stream in short order. He was unable to clear his way far enough to
lose the sound of the water cascading downward. He stopped to listen every
couple of minutes to be sure.
He was hot, drenched in sweat, and he was sure he was attracting every insect on
the island. He made enough noise to alert everything to his presence. After a
couple of hours or more, he calculated he was no more than a half mile from the
beach. Looking upward told him nothing about how far there was to go.
He was ready to quit. It was hopeless and he thought he could find his way back
the next day by way of what he'd cleared the first day, only it was a series of
dead ends. He'd start earlier tomorrow before it got so hot. He couldn't
remember it cooling off since he'd been there.
There were no signs that men had been there before. All he'd seen was
undergrowth and more undergrowth during his aborted climb. The beach showed no
sign of anyone ever being on it before. He made a point of keeping his eyes open
to see some sign of a fire being built. If men had been here, they'd need to
build a fire for cooking food.
It was possible someone might live on the far side of the island but with the
thickness of the underbrush, they'd never made an attempt to come visit his
beach, which was more than odd. No, Kodak decided, he was the only man there.
Could this be one of the unexplored islands? Did anyone know it was here? Had it
been created by volcanic eruption or did it surface during a storm? Then, how
did the animals get here? Noah perhaps?
Kodak didn't know there might be uncharted places left on earth. Everything
could be seen from space. Maybe he'd discovered this island? He and his pilot.
He could name the island after the pilot if that was the case. If he only
remembered his name.
They shook hands and exchanged names when they first met. The pilot had helped
to load Kodak's gear into the tail section of the plane. The pilot knew where he
was going and if he thought there was any danger in flying straight out into the
Pacific, he'd not shown any sign of fear.
This was all arranged by Nature magazine. Kodak didn't think to question the
pilot's plan or even look at the map of his route. He seemed to know what he was
doing. He wore aviator's glasses and a World War II bomber jacket that was well
worn. What else did Kodak need to see for him to trust his pilot? It wasn't his
fault the engines failed, but the failure was the death of him, and only by dumb
luck had Kodak survived.
Kodak was standing in the stream when he realized he was daydreaming again.
Kodak walked down the stream and was back at his camp in no time. He felt
suspiciously like he'd wasted an otherwise nice afternoon. There had to be an
easier way to get to the top of that island; but instead of worrying about it he
decided he'd take a swim, eat, and figure out tomorrow's plan once he'd cooled
down.
Before he knew it, it was tomorrow, and he went back to blazing a trail to the
top of the island. The sweat and discomfort of his sore muscles made him stop
for rest more often the second day. He'd put on his sneakers instead of his
heavier climbing boots, and once stymied for the second or third time, he
decided to climb by way of the stream. He might never make it if he had to chop
his way to the top.
The jungle thinned out as he got toward the top. Once there he stood on a
football field size bare spot. He calculated by the cut of the very top, this
was a volcanic island and the undergrowth had returned after the last eruption.
The indentions and craters were consistent with what he'd think a long ago dead
volcano might look like. It was uneven and rocky in the center, but the jungle
was thin enough to negotiate three hundred and sixty degrees around the barren
center of the island's top.
When he got to a place that gave him a view of three sides of the island, he
located the lagoon and knew the shadow close to the mouth of the lagoon was the
plane a few feet below the surface.
He was sorry he didn't bring his camera, but he'd be back. He hadn't seen that
much wildlife. He'd heard the rustling in the brush and there were bird sounds
in the distance, but as he climbed it went silent, or at least he didn't hear
much in the way of animal sounds.
As loud as he was crashing through the undergrowth, the animals were no doubt
cautious of some danger that may come with the invader. Had they seen men
before? Had they learned to fear them?
He could see how the peninsulas of sand came around to almost touch beneath the
lush green waters, the opening into the lagoon being no more than a few yards
wide. The lagoon appeared calm. There were other areas that came with large
waves beating against a rocky coast. It was a scenic perch with no sign of
inhabitants.
He looked for other places that might be hospitable, but the rest of the island
moved sharply upward, away from the water. The lagoon was cradled inside one of
the natural turns of the shoreline. If you didn't know what you were looking
for, it would be easy to miss. Kodak searched the horizon for any sign of ships
or planes. He was alone. The only plane was at the bottom of the lagoon and he
was the only man.
To be continued...
Posted: 02/28/20