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North Slope
North Slope
North Slope
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North Slope

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In 1968, one oil company was left drilling for oil on the North Slope of Alaska. All the big guns had given up and left the icy waste of this frozen desert. When the drill penetrated the lake of oil beneath the ice, so began what was described as the ‘second gold rush in Alaskan history’. Michael Parker has taken this historical fact and turned it into a brilliant thriller that penetrates the reader’s mind as keenly as the drill cut through the ice. Fyffe Oil, alone on the Slope is fighting against time and a ruthless killer who is determined to prevent the company succeeding. Andrew Fyffe, the owner, is desperate, and when his chief engineer is murdered, he has only one man he can turn to; Joshua McKinnon. But McKinnon is washed up; a drunk and a dropout. Fyffe drags him from the bars in Fairbanks and forces him to fly up to the rig. McKinnon soon learns that the killer is ruthless and will stop at nothing to prevent him finding oil. He can trust no-one and battles against the elements and the killer in a desperate race against time. NORTH SLOPE is a teeth chattering, nerve shattering novel set in an Arctic wasteland from a gifted writer.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 18, 2016
ISBN9781524204402
North Slope
Author

Michael Parker

Michael Parker is responsible for Intel’s FPGA division digital signal processing (DSP) product planning. This includes Variable Precision FPGA silicon architecture for DSP applications, DSP tool development, floating point tools, IP and video IP. He joined Altera (now Intel) in January 2007, and has over 20 years of previous DSP engineering design experience with companies such as Alvarion, Soma Networks, Avalcom, TCSI, Stanford Telecom and several startup companies. He holds an MSEE from Santa Clara University, and BSEE from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

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    Book preview

    North Slope - Michael Parker

    North Slope

    ––––––––

    by

    ––––––––

    Michael Parker

    The right of Michael Parker to be identified as the Author of this Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998.

    Copyright © Michael Parker 1980

    First published in Great Britain by Macmillan Ltd.

    This edition published by Michael Parker (2007)

    ––––––––

    All characters in this publication are fictitious and resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Any person who does so may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

    www.michaelparkerbooks.com

    Jacket design by www.lucidcanvas.co.uk

    ––––––––

    For my darling wife Patricia

    Table of Contents

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Chapter Eight

    Chapter Nine

    Chapter Ten

    Chapter Eleven

    Chapter Twelve

    Chapter Thirteen

    Chapter Fourteen

    Chapter Fifteen

    Chapter Sixteen

    Chapter Seventeen

    Chapter Eighteen

    Michael Parker’s web links

    North Slope 1968.

    North Slope is a barren desert of ice in Alaska that stretches from the Brooks Mountains to the Beaufort Sea, frozen during the winter clear to the North Pole.

    It is in this wilderness that the Fyffe Oil Company struggles in its search for oil. Andrew Fyffe, owner of the company, finds time and money are running out. On the rig a man has been killed; suspicion and fear are rampant among the drilling crews as they continue their superhuman efforts before Fyffe goes bust.

    The one man who (Fyffe believes) can save the company is McKinnon, once a famous wildcat oil man, but now a drunk, a drop-out. Fyffe kidnaps McKinnon from a drinking spree and flies him up to the oil rig, Fyffe One. When McKinnon sobers up he quickly sees he will need all his old resourcefulness, skill and courage to save the rig from catastrophe.

    The violent action of this story takes place against the background, strongly conveyed, of Alaskan Arctic winter and night. The rig and its crew confront dangers from temperatures far below zero, from fire, and from a subtle and complex intrigue ruthlessly executed by men whose objectives do not include the welfare of Fyffe One.

    This first novel tells a powerful story with conviction, a story to spellbind the reader and a mystery to be solved.

    CHAPTER ONE

    Alaska 1968

    Martin Bradley turned up the heavy collar of his parka and shuddered at the cold onslaught of the Alaskan winter. The warmth of the taxi was just a memory, quickly fading as it disappeared in a swirl of snow. Behind him the Chena River flowed quietly. He looked at it and shuddered again. The reflected glow of the street lamps danced and flickered along its dreary length. Above him the dark sky held a thin trace of moonlight that barely showed in the cold inky blackness of the water. He turned from it and crossed the street.

    Bradley was looking for somebody that night. He had been doing so for two days now. For two days he had been searching the bars and hostelries of Fairbanks, and now he was cold and tired. He didn't even want to find the man he was seeking. He dreaded meeting him, because he despised him. But, above that, he feared him. So he was convinced that finding him would lead only to failure.

    But his own conviction counted for nothing against the opposite, almost fatalistic belief of his boss, Andrew Fyffe, owner and founder of Fyffe Oil. It was an order from that man, that enigma that Bradley was now following, still with Fyffe's words echoing in his brain. 'Find him,' Fyffe had said. 'Nothing will matter anymore if you don't. He's our only chance.

    The tawdry saloons of Fairbanks, Alaska's original frontier town, were filled with a hotchpotch of humanity: Eskimos, Aleut Indians, Whites. Women hovered, waiting for the opportunity to relieve the men of their tensions - and their money. Sourdoughs, roustabouts, drifters. Oilmen, miners, militia. This crossroads, nestling at the foot of the Yukon mountains, beckoned with the crooked finger of opportunity. Bradley hated it. He preferred the subtler atmosphere of Juneau, Alaska's capital in the Panhandle, the strip of territory among the south-west coast.

    Each bar he tried was the same: noisy, smoky, smelly. He walked through each one studying the faces. Some were familiar, most not. Each time the same question, each time the same answer. He despaired of ever finding him.

    But then the answer changed. The sourdough nodded. Yes. Somewhere along the street he'd seen the American. An hour ago. No, he didn't remember which bar. A drink? Now, that was generous.... He remembered! It was Wexler's.

    Bradley stumbled from the bar – nervous now, apprehensive. His quarry was in sight and he didn't like it.

    Wexler's was just off the main street. It looked like any other bar from the outside – grimy, without character. Its only pretension to commercialism was a bright neon sign.

    A wave of heat smacked into him as he opened the door. Blue smoke hung above the tables in almost motionless gossamer clouds, the air conditioning having long since expired. In one corner a huge black pot-belly stove burned fiercely. Such was the heat it threw out that no tables were near it. Bradley looked into the sea of faces, studying each one carefully, just as he had done a thousand times. The man he was looking for was there alright, sitting on his own. Bradley hadn't expected it any other way.

    The man was trouble. Bradley's stomach screwed up into a knot and suddenly he felt sick. He turned towards the door.

    'In or out, Mac, what's it to be?'

    The barman's voice startled him.

    'Ah, beer please.' His own voice sounded thick. He took the beer and paid for it. He swallowed it hurriedly and ordered another one. A drunk nudged him and he moved out of the way. He tossed the money on to the bar and took the beer across to the table. The man looked up at him with an expression of idle curiosity that quickly changed as Bradley slid into the seat opposite him. They looked at each other for a while. Bradley could feel the tension across his chest as his heart pounded. He finally said: 'You're McKinnon, aren't you?'

    McKinnon looked at him for what seemed like an eternity, his face empty, the eyes glazed and bloodshot from alcoholic excess. He raised his glass and held it to his lips as he stared across at Bradley. Then he put it down, traces of beer running from the corner of his mouth.

    'And you're Bradley,' he answered. 'Still working for that tin pot outfit?'

    Bradley ignored the jibe, but it unsettled him. He wanted the conversation to be neat, objective – and without malice. But with McKinnon you could plan nothing. Not with a man of his reputation: driller, geologist, trouble shooter, one-time oil-boss. Best wildcatter in the business, Fyffe had said.

    Bradley studied his face. Lantern-jawed was the only way to describe it. Square and menacing. In the middle the nose was large and round, flared nostrils opening slightly with each drawn breath. Above it the eyes, once so blue and clear, were now dull and red rimmed. Pouches sagged from them, looking unnatural against the granite quality of the bone structure. His hair was white and thin. It was a sorry-looking face that bore the marks of a tough life in the oil world. And now he sat here in Fairbanks, the end of his road; a drifter, a drunk. Somewhere there was a wife, but that had been a long time ago.

    'Yes, I'm still working for Fyffe. But what about you, McKinnon? What are you doing?'

    McKinnon leaned across the table, his foul breath catching Bradley in the face. Bradley drew back sharply, turning his face away from the stench.

    'Sitting in this god-damned bar drinking this beer!' He sat back and swallowed the beer in a massive gulp, then crashed the glass on to the table. 'Get me a beer, Bradley. I reckon you owe me.'

    Bradley took the glass and got the drink. The old man had said to humour him. He snorted. Humour him, hell! Why wasn't Fyffe doing this himself if it was so damned important? It was a stupid idea, he thought. He wanted to throw the beer into McKinnon's face, but lacked the courage to do it. McKinnon took it without thanks.

    'Well, Bradley,' he drooled, 'say your piece and git!' He threw his head sideways to add emphasis and practically toppled from the chair. Bradley winced; the man was dead drunk, and he was about to put a serious proposition to him.

    'I hear you're out of work, McKinnon,' he said at last.

    'Where d'you hear that?' McKinnon slurred.

    'Carrie.'

    McKinnon raised his head and looked vacantly at Bradley. The mention of her name had an obvious effect on him. 'You go see her?'

    Bradley nodded. 'Why?'

    'I had to find you, and I thought Carrie was the obvious person to ask.'

    McKinnon looked down into his glass. He thought of her. What had happened, he wondered? She had been so good for him. 'Why d'you want to go and see her, anyway?' he asked suddenly.

    'You already asked me that. I needed to know where to find you.' She hadn't really done him much good, he reflected. McKinnon and his woman had lived together for a couple of stormy years. They had been happy until McKinnon's drinking had become steadily worse. The fights got worse, too; then she had told him it was finished. Three months ago. But she still loved him.

    He looked again at McKinnon and felt a shudder. She had even pleaded with him to help the man back to his feet again. 'Carrie said she didn't know where you were, but it wouldn't take long to find you.'

    'You had no right to go see her,' McKinnon said angrily.

    Bradley shrugged. 'I had to start somewhere.' He watched McKinnon for a while. 'Well,' he said at last, 'are you out of work?'

    McKinnon lifted his stubbled chin. 'Yep. Why? You offering me a job?'

    Bradley nodded. 'Sort of.'

    McKinnon pulled at the beer again, letting the glass down unsteadily. 'Well, either you are or you ain't. If you ain't, that's good. If you are, you can stick the job right up your ass!'

    'It's good money.'

    'I don't need it.'

    I think you do.'

    McKinnon leaned well over the table and pointed his finger so that it was about an inch from Bradley's nose. His foul breath seemed to come from the end of his finger. 'You keep your thoughts to yourself, Bradley, or I'm going to smash this glass into your tiny little accountant face!'

    The reference to Bradley's position in the oil company meant that McKinnon was not completely drunk, but Bradley knew he would still be troublesome.

    'Do you remember Andrew Fyffe?' he asked. McKinnon sat back in his chair. Bradley continued. 'I'm here on his behalf and...'

    'Like I said,' McKinnon interrupted, 'same tin pot outfit.' Suddenly the look on his face changed. His mouth fell open slightly. 'Hey, Fyffe Oil is bleeding itself to death on the other side of Brooks Range.' His eyelids dropped and he peered at Bradley. 'So that's it. You want me to go up there for Fyffe. Hell, man, you must be sick.' He moved closer in an almost conspiratorial way. 'Do you know it's as cold as the moon up there? And do you know that when the wind blows men die? For God's sake, up there on the Slope there isn't any cover for fifty miles in any direction. I'd sooner die here in this bar than in that Godforsaken wilderness. It's for polar bears and fools.'

    Bradley nodded. 'It wouldn't be for long.'

    McKinnon smiled without looking at him. 'You're damn right it wouldn't. About a week, I reckon, and then it would be for ever. For eternity.'

    Bradley looked nervously into his beer, twisting the glass absently. 'It's not that bad, McKinnon. Men survive it.' It was a poor rejoinder, and he knew it.

    McKinnon lifted his beer to his lips and sipped at it, peering over the top of his glass. 'Piss off!' he said.

    Bradley knew it wasn't going well, but he pressed on. 'No, hear what I have to say, McKinnon. Make up your mind when you've heard what I have to say. It's too good a proposition to miss.' It was no good; he felt terrible. His breathing still hadn't settled and his heart still pounded away remorselessly in his chest. He was scared and looked it. The last time they had met he had felt this way. McKinnon had hit him then. That had been five years ago. He'd been having an affair with McKinnon's wife. She had never been a good wife; the whole company knew it. He suspected that McKinnon had known, but preferred to ignore it. He knew McKinnon had loved her; she was his kind of woman. But her continuing infidelity had been too much for him to take. It was about that time that McKinnon had started his drinking. Then Fyffe sacked him and the desolation was complete. Bradley didn't even know why he despised the man so. He had no right to, but he did. Perhaps his feelings were in reality a cloak to mask his fear of the man.

    McKinnon put his glass down. Carefully, and as articulately as he could, he said: 'There is no proposition that you or Fyffe could put to me, now or ever. There is nothing either of you could do to replace the years of deprivation and despair you have caused me. If you don't leave this bar now, Bradley, I swear I will kill you.'

    The contrived menace in his voice scared Bradley so much that his throat seemed to dry instantly. He took two quick gulps of beer.

    'If you attack me, McKinnon, you'll end up in gaol. You've avoided it all these years, so for God's sake don't sink to those depths now. You must listen to me. Whether you agree or not, you owe it to yourself to listen to this offer of' - he struggled to find a word - 'of salvation.'

    'Whose salvation?' McKinnon asked. 'Yours, Fyffe's or mine?'

    He turned his face away and peered through the fog. A waiter was clearing up glasses from the overcrowded tables. McKinnon called to him. 'Waiter. Hey, you!' The man ignored him and carried on clearing the glasses away. McKinnon lurched drunkenly to his feet. 'Well, the lousy sonofabitch.'

    Bradley sprang up and put a restraining hand on his shoulder. McKinnon swung round, knocking his hand away. For a sickening moment Bradley thought McKinnon was going to hit him.

    'I'll get a beer for you, Mac. Please. Sit down.'

    McKinnon rocked unsteadily on his feet, glaring at Bradley. Then he sat down. Bradley sighed with relief and went over to the bar for the beer.

    McKinnon again took it without thanks. Bradley watched him impatiently.

    'Listen, McKinnon, Fyffe is drilling up on the North Slope. You knew that anyway. The lease expired a month ago. For Christ's sake listen to me, McKinnon!'

    The oilman's attention had wandered. Someone had started an argument across the room. The sudden explosion in Bradley's voice swung him round and he faced the accountant stonily.

    Bradley clenched his teeth and drew in a slow breath to steady his rising temper. McKinnon appeared not to notice. 'The lease expired four weeks ago,' he went on. 'We have two months of the option left. Fyffe is convinced we're drilling over oil. He has problems, I'll admit, but all he needs is a good wildcatter. If we don't make it' - he shrugged his shoulders - 'a lot of people will suffer: the men up there on the rig; Fyffe; myself; not to mention the blow to America's oil reserves.'

    It was an appeal, but McKinnon was unimpressed. He smiled thinly. 'Well, well, well. Our dear Bradley's out of a job, and Uncle Sam's out of oil. Now, that is a shame.'

    He poured more beer down his throat. A lot of it ran off his chin and down his neck, soaking into his already beer-stained shirt.

    'Hell, Bradley, I don't owe you, Fyffe, Uncle Sam or anybody a living. You've done nothing for me, so I'm doing nothing for you.'

    'Fyffe will pay you twenty thousand dollars,' Bradley said quietly.

    McKinnon threw his head back and laughed out loud. 'Ha! The magic word: the golden egg. It might just as well be twenty thousand balls, because you ain't getting me within a thousand miles of Fyffe's stinking oil company. Get it?'

    Bradley went on undeterred. 'If we strike oil, you'll get a twenty-five-per-cent partnership in the business.'

    McKinnon sprang up from his chair, his eyes blazing. His face went bright red, and Bradley thought he was going to hit him. 'Stick it, Bradley. Stick it, stick it, stick it!'

    The noise in the bar died to a whisper and everybody turned in their direction. McKinnon glared back at them. There was no mistaking the anger in his eyes, or his condition as he swayed drunkenly. He shouted at them. 'Get back to your own business, you bums, or I'll throw some of you out the window.'

    He almost fell over then. The crowd ignored him, and the noise-level rose again. He sat down.

    'It's a little late in the day to be asking for an oil boss,' he said. 'What happened to the other one - get cold feet?'

    The pun struck McKinnon as funny and he started giggling. Bradley squirmed with embarrassment, but said nothing. He just waited until the laughter had stopped. Then he said: 'He died.'

    It had a telling effect. McKinnon became serious all of a sudden. 'What do you mean, he died?'

    Bradley shrugged his shoulders. 'I don't know; I didn't get to see the medical reports.'

    McKinnon leaned over the table and reduced his voice to a barely audible whisper. His breath caught Bradley full in the face, although he held his teeth tight together. Bradley wanted to vomit.

    'If you don't leave now, Bradley, I'll throw you out. I swear it. I've listened to your lousy proposition and you've heard my answer. Now git!'

    Bradley looked at his beer and twirled the glass gently in his fingers. He thought of saying something, but the words wouldn't come. He stood up and dug his hands into his pockets. He fished out some coins and threw them angrily on to the table. 'Here, get yourself some beer.' He left McKinnon staring at the money and walked out of the bar.

    The air outside felt fresh and clean. He drank heavily from it. A cab cruised into view and he hailed it. It took him to another saloon a few streets away. He asked the driver to wait, and went in. It was much the same as any other; small, crowded, smoky. Standing at the bar was a giant of a man in typical Eskimo dress: mukluk boots, ski-pants and a brightly coloured Grenfell parka coat. He was talking to a man whom he dwarfed. Bradley went over to the giant Indian and tapped him on the arm.

    'Skookum, I've found him. He's in Wexler's on main street. There's a cab outside. Get over there and pick a fight with him. I'll wait here.'

    CHAPTER TWO

    McKinnon came to under an umbrella of pain. It curled its way around the top of his head like a tightening band, cutting gently but with the precision of a surgeon's knife. As he woke and clucked his tongue to wash out the foul   taste in his mouth his jaw moved, and the pain in it was so intense it threatened to make him pass out again. He felt stiff, his limbs ached, his eyes throbbed and he felt sick. He opened one eye and looked about him. He did not recognise his surroundings. He could not see a light, but was aware of an eerie greenish glow. There were shallow images about him. He opened the other eye, blinking to clear away the sleep. Just silhouettes. People. He knew he had been moved from wherever it was he had been. Where was that? he wondered.

    He tried to sit up, but something held him fast like a vice. He could not move. He sat still then, and tried to take stock of his situation and his surroundings. The silhouettes around him were like people sitting in a darkened room watching television. Then he became aware of the gentle throbbing noise. At first he had thought it was in his head, but now he realised it was outside. He saw windows; not many. Four people. They sat motionless, ignoring him. And that greenish colour?

    He was in an aeroplane!

    Hell! He thought. What's happening? He tried to sit up, but the seat-belt held him fast. The silhouette in the front left-hand seat moved, bringing its hand up in front of his face. It leaned forward and moved its hand on to the panel. McKinnon watched fascinated. Eventually the silhouette turned towards the one on the right and tapped it on the shoulder, making a diving motion with its hand. The other one responded with a nod of its head.

    'Umiat field?' it shouted.

    The pilot put his thumb up.

    Umiat field. McKinnon knew it, or knew of it. It was on the very fringes of the North Slope; on that barren plain of ice trapped between the Brooks mountain range and the Beaufort Sea. Not that 'sea' was an apt description: there was nothing to distinguish land from sea at that time of the year. One could walk from here to the North Pole. He felt an uncomfortable shudder run through his spine.

    The plane banked sharply and dropped gently. Somewhere behind them was the eight-thousand-foot Endicott mountain range; a massive barrier marching through Canada and America and into Mexico. McKinnon considered those soaring peaks reaching high into the Arctic sky, up here on top of the world, and the one-thousand-foot cloud-base that often skirted the lower slopes. It was incredible to him that such a tiny aircraft was safe in this hostile environment. He sniffed and gave in to the pain that racked his body.

    The aeroplane levelled out briefly, wobbled momentarily and then banked again. The engine note disappeared altogether. McKinnon's heart missed a beat. His ears opened with the changing air-pressure and the engine note surfaced. His heart resumed its normal pace.

    Although it was black outside, he could see wisps of cloud whipping over the wing and along the fuselage, throwing back a vague iridescent glow into the cockpit. It was in this strange half-light that he was able to study the other occupants. The pilot was of no interest to him; just some guy doing a job, although he probably worked for the same group as the others. Next to the pilot he recognised Bradley. It came back to him then. Wexler's! Bradley had come in there. Offered him a job with Fyffe! Andrew bloody Fyffe. But what had happened? He shook his head and looked at the colossus sitting next to him. His jaw throbbed then as the memory of a huge fist came to his mind.

    The plane dipped again and levelled out. It kept moving up and down as the clouds pushed it, knocking it about. Then it broke from the cloud and the lights of the airfield marched away from them like two rows of cat's eyes in a curiously opaque backdrop of barren land. They grew larger as the small craft sped towards them. The pilot skilfully adjusted the trim to bring the plane settling between the two rows and on to the frozen strip.

    McKinnon felt the deceleration as the plane slowed. He wasn't aware of any real braking effort and soon they had stopped beside the small airport building. Bradley

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