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Subject: {Bombadil}JDR"Amazonia 1a"( MF+ Mf+ FF fant )[1/4]
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                             JOHN DARK REPOST
The following story is posted for the entertainment of adults.  If you are 
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The enjoyment of these reposts can be increased by reading the "Coming 
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These stories have not been written by the person posting them.  Many of 
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well.  



                           =====================

Story #5
by Tom Bombadil  
(c) Apr 1997

Disclaimer:  All the standard rules apply.  If you are offended 
by explicit descriptions of sex or the human body, if it is 
illegal to possess such materials at your location, if you are 
under-age by law in your location, or if somebody else thinks you 
might have too much fun reading it, stop right now and remove this 
text from your computer.

This is purely a work of fiction, with all characters and actions 
described by me coming straight out of my imagination.  As a work of 
fiction, it does not condone or condemn any of the activities or 
actions described, nor does it relate to any type of real events in 
my life, or known to me in the lives of any of my friends or 
relatives.

You've been warned.

I give permission for anyone to archive or share this story.

********************************************************************

                           =====================
                                 Amazonia
                              by Tom Bombadil  
                           via stbush@iglou.com
Section 1a


********** Late afternoon, one day in October

Tom cursed the storm, cursed the plane, cursed the lunatic who'd 
gotten him stuck in this situation, and cursed his ex-wife for 
getting him into this line of work in the first place.

Sudden jolts and twists from the winds outside nearly made him 
lose his lunch, but he held it inside.  He had better things to do 
than get sick.  Like survive.  Running along the edge of the main 
cloud deck, trying to avoid the worst of the turbulence, he looked 
for somewhere to land, somewhere to ditch.  Anywhere.  He was 
running out of time, out of fuel, and out of luck.

********** Early that morning

Sixteen hours ago, some short while before dawn, he'd just started 
securing his small twin prop against the coming storm, one of many 
to ravage the small group of islands he serviced.  It was, by then, 
an almost automatic procedure, requiring little thought.  A radio in 
the background was giving out details on the typhoon's size, wind 
velocity, track, and surge height.  That's when a madman showed up 
with a big, heavy tote bag.

Like in a script from a 'B' movie, the man pulled out a rather 
large pistol and waved it around under Tom's nose for a few 
seconds.

"You can fly, no?"  Bad English, a terrible accent, and a furtive, 
glance-over-the-shoulder type attitude would have had Tom rolling 
around with laughter - that is, if one very large-looking handgun 
hadn't been occupying most of his attention.

"Ah, <gulp> well, that is, uh ..."  A simple yes or no didn't seem 
appropriate to him, at the time.  No probably would have made him 
disposable.  Yes would have made him ... something.  He didn't 
know.  In the state his mind was in, that made perfect sense.

"Get in plane.  You fly me someplace NOW!  Si?"  That last word was 
punctuated by the man touching the barrel of his pistol to the 
bridge of Tom's nose.  From that perspective, the pistol looked more 
like a small cannon.  The terrified man nodded his head - very 
slowly, and very carefully.

"Good.  We go now.  Fast!  GO!"

Tall, suave, and debonair he might be, but despite his movie star 
looks, Tom was no brave hero.  He was an ex commercial pilot who 
happened to have been roped into opening his own tiny air service, 
on a group of tiny tropical islands, by his then wife.  Now 
ex-wife.  The man with the pistol, looking just as corny as he 
sounded, with his dirty fatigues, Hispanic features, and oversized 
moustache, followed directly behind the pilot as he prepared his 
plane for takeoff.

A few minutes later Tom slipped into the pilot's seat, his 
kidnapper taking the passenger seat behind and across from him.  
That gun was still there.

"We go now.  Get plane moving.  We take off, fly north."

Tom started the plane and went through his pre-flight ritual, 
possibly working a little faster and less thoroughly than usual 
because of the urging of his passenger.

"No call anyone!"  The hijacker's screech was in response to Tom 
picking up the radio's mike.

"I have to call for permission to take off and for a time slot on 
the runway.  We can't just toodle over there and whoosh! up into the 
sky!  It's just too dangerous!"  

Apparently the man with the gun disagreed.  "You go now, we take off 
now, or I keel you and I fly plane!"  That won him the argument.  
Tom started praying.

There was a lot of cursing and yelling coming over the radio as he 
taxied onto the runway and took off upwind.  A lot.  Tom also 
noticed the flashing lights of the local constabulary vehicle beside 
the oversized hut that served as passenger area, customs, taxi 
stand, and control tower.

"Fly north" was the only instruction immediately forthcoming from 
the man in charge.  They flew across the island and towards the 
the oncoming hurricane.

********** Late afternoon again

Tom spotted a tiny swatch of non-ocean at about the same time the 
needle of his plane's fuel gauge touched 'E'.  Shock, relief, and a 
sudden rush of adrenaline flowed through his tired body at the 
sight.  He knew it would be a battle to get there, fighting across 
the face of the storm, but it was his only hope.  

Another prayer, far from the first that day and definitely not the 
last, escaped unnoticed.  He had one eye on his target and the 
other on the fuel gauge, watching the needle for his reserve tank.  
His main tank was long since empty.

Trying to stay as high as possible, just in case, he aimed for a 
spot many miles upwind of the island.  His wind gauge showed the 
outside air moving at about 160 knots.  The only bit of modern gear 
he had, the satellite positioning thing he'd won off a sailor in a 
craps game, told him he was travelling at forty knots.  He didn't 
even try to do the math.  The answer was obvious.

Abandoning his attempt to stay high, he started a long, slow, fuel-
saving descent.  Another mumble, half prayer and half curse, lost 
itself in all the rest of the noise in the cabin.  There was a 
chance to survive - he believed - if the plane stayed in one piece, 
if the wind didn't get worse, if the fuel held out, and if he 
didn't crack.  Focusing his attention back on that tiny bump of 
green, he flew on.  

********** Back to the morning

"Carlos."  That was what the man called himself.  Carlos.  Tom 
almost burst out laughing.  The situation seemed so unreal to him.  
He'd seen every bad action movie ever made, and he'd rate the plot 
and character development on this one a solid 'B-'.  Not even worth 
watching twice, since the story line was so linear and the 
characters so one-dimensional.

Carlos pulled a map from the bag which, Tom noticed, was 
otherwise filled with cash.  He began to feel trapped inside some 
mad director's nightmare.

Spreading the map out in front of Tom, Carlos pointed at a small 
island, circled in red.  It was well away from any normal air or 
water traffic, and was supposed to be uninhabited.

"We go there.  I have many friends there."

"Totally predictable," Tom thought to himself.  He set his course, 
checked his instruments, and prayed they beat the storm.

********** Late afternoon, once more

Tom looked carefully, fighting the rays of the setting sun.  "Yes", 
he thought to himself, "it's getting closer!"  That tiny bit of land 
did appear to be getting bigger.  A small piece of his mind noticed 
that the island had three big mountains, two large lakes or lagoons, 
and was surrounded by a lot of reef, if the circle of white foam he 
saw was any indication.

With more skill than he thought he had, or possibly more luck than 
he thought he deserved, he kept the plane flying.  The typhoon was 
getting worse, the turbulence was getting worse, the light was 
getting worse, and his stomach was getting worse.  A beach came 
into view, wide and silvery white.  That beach was the only 
flattish bit he'd seen that didn't have trees growing on it, so 
that's where he aimed the plane.  

It was then that both engines, one right after the other, coughed 
and died.  

He swore some more.

********** Earlier that afternoon

The island Carlos wanted eventually showed up.  The moustachioed  
man smiled, finally happy about something.  He still looked nervous 
to Tom, and that gun still looked very large when he waved it 
around.

"You fly over island, I jump out.  I take parachute!  Ha ha ha!"  
Tom had some 'chutes in the back.  They'd been left there by a 
skydiving club that sometimes hired him, and he'd been waiting 
for one of the women to pick them up.  That was another reason he'd 
been with the plane.  According to what he'd heard, the 'chutes had 
been packed by rookies, just for practice.  None of the members 
took the chance of using those specific ones, with good reason.  
Not that he was going to say anything to Carlos.

A short while later they were flying directly over the island at 
about 6000 feet.  That's when Carlos decided to jump.  His last 
words were not pleasant ones.

"You no land here.  You do, I keel you.  If I no keel you, my 
friends, they keel you.  They no like snoopy pilots!  Ha ha ha!"
With that parting comment, he jumped.

Tom circled the plane around once, just to check.  He saw that the 
'chute had actually opened.  That's when he finally cracked a big 
smile and started chuckling to himself.  "The bastard deserves 
exactly what he's gonna get.  The fuckin' idiot."

It didn't take much math for him to figure out where Carlos would 
land.  They were directly above the island, a mile up.  The island 
was only a mile across.  The actual outside air speed he calculated 
at about 85 knots at his altitude - reasonable, he thought, with the 
storm bearing down on them.  He estimated the guy would splash down 
about half a mile out to sea, down wind and down current.  It made 
him feel a little better, in a sick sort of way.

Tom thought through his options.  Returning to home base was out of 
the question - not enough fuel.  Landing on the island under him, 
where he thought his life expectancy would probably be measured in 
hours, was ruled out.  Ditching in the ocean was out of the 
question.  He had a sea survival suit, but it was army surplus, 
and he trusted it about as far as he could throw his plane.  Besides 
which, nobody knew where he'd gone, so nobody knew where to look, 
and with the storm, it would be at least twenty four hours before 
anyone else could even get airborne.  He thought his best bet would 
be to try and race the typhoon to another island somewhere.

Studying the chart, he saw there was one, perhaps three hour's 
flight away to the northwest.  It was by far the closest, and it was 
marked with an airstrip.  He thought it well within range of his 
remaining fuel.  Turning the plane, he flew off in that direction.  

The island he was headed for was about an hour's flying time too far 
away.  The storm came in too fast, and Tom ended up running in front 
of it, just trying to keep the bucket of bolts he was riding in from 
being torn apart.  He didn't have much hope left because, according 
to the charts, he was in open water with no land for at least three 
thousand miles in the only direction the storm was letting him 
travel in.  That's why the sight of the tiny island had come as such 
a welcome shock.

********** Early evening

There was nothing much he could do.  Fighting the stick, he muscled 
the plane into a shallow dive, pulling up and coasting into a stall 
just above the waves.  A quick flash of whitecaps went by before he 
splashed down, creating another tiny surge of hope.  He'd cleared 
the reef.  After that, everything was a blur of water and waves and 
sky as he struggled to stay afloat and alive.

********** The next day, and so on

The sound of giggling, along with something prodding him in the 
ribs, woke him up.  The sun was high in the sky, beating down on 
him, and he felt terrible.  After a few seconds of hazy thought he 
remembered why he should feel terrible.  Tom decided to be happy he 
was feeling at all.  It took a good pinch <self-administered> before 
he admitted to himself that he was both alive and not dreaming.  
There was another prodding on his ribs.  That slight movement sent 
out small tendrils of pain and sickness which proceeded to explode 
in his head and gut.

A few minutes later, after losing his last dozen or so meals (by 
his estimate, anyway), he looked around.  The prodders were 
children.  He shook his head to try and clear his vision, and that, 
he realized almost immediately, was a mistake.  It was another 
moment or two before the pain behind his eyes died down enough for 
him to look around again.

They were still there.  Maybe two dozen or so young girls, all 
vaguely the same size, and looking like they were all about the 
same age.  He thought perhaps nine or ten years old.  None much 
older, none much younger, and all quite naked.

A couple of the girls broke away from the group and began running 
down the beach, leaving the rest pointing and giggling and gabbing 
away in some sort of native gibberish he didn't recognize.  At first 
glance he thought they were all Polynesians of some sort, since they 
were all dark skinned, but then he took a closer look.

The girls were all darkly tanned, though some were definitely 
naturally darker than others.  The majority had black hair and dark 
brown eyes.  He saw, though, that some had brown hair, a couple were 
blonde, and one was a redhead.  Looking closer, he noticed the same 
variety of eye colours, with a few pairs of hazel eyes and a few 
pairs of blue eyes mixed in with the brown, and all of them were  
focused on him.  One girl even had hair blonder and eyes bluer than 
his own.  

"Thank god", he thought to himself.  "White folk.  Civilization."  
He knew of a number of islands where the natives were very 
unfriendly to visitors.  With some obviously Caucasian children 
running around, despite their dress code, he believed that civilized 
people had to be near.  Life was slowly returning to his body, so 
he decided to crawl up off the beach and into the shade of some 
nearby trees.  He made it, but his strength gave out just as he 
leaned back against the trunk of a palm.  The last thing he saw 
before he passed out again was another group of young girls running 
up the beach in his direction.

**********

The next time he woke up it was dark.  He was on some sort of 
mat or low bed with several palm-frond blankets keeping him warm.  
His clothes had disappeared, and he wasn't alone.  After a few 
seconds just taking note of what he could in the dark, he knew 
that his bed partner was a woman.  Even he couldn't mistake the 
warmth and softness of the breasts on his arm.  A chill, the 
tightness of his skin, and the vague pain in his chest, told him he 
had a fever.  His slight stirrings woke his companion.

She whispered at him in that unfamiliar tongue, and when he didn't 
respond, she got up.  Tom lay there wondering what had happened to 
him until she returned with a container of some sort.  She made him 
drink down all of the sweet, refreshing contents, and then forced 
him back down.  After a few minutes, since he was unable to do much 
but blink his eyes, he fell back to sleep.

**********

More girlish giggling and laughing woke him.  It was daytime, but 
the sun wasn't shining in his eyes.  The insides of a hut was what 
he saw immediately.  A single room hut made from bamboo and palm 
leaves.  One door.  Two windows.  Both windows were filled with the 
heads of young girls peering in at him.  When he sat up, they all 
shrieked and ran.  He wondered if they were the same girls he'd 
seen on the beach.  They looked to be about the same age, from what  
little he'd been able to see of them through the windows.

A few minutes later, the door opened and a young woman walked in.  
She looked like a native, with the classic strong face, dark hair 
and eyes, and solid body.  Tom could see little fat on her frame, 
and admired her decidedly nice figure, legs, and breasts.  Her only 
clothing was a grass skirt, and as she moved, he could see she wore 
nothing underneath.  Her face, he realized rather belatedly, was 
also quite nice.

The woman brought him another container of that sweet tasting drink 
he remembered having before.  "Or was it twice?" he thought aloud.  
Despite his long sleep, he still felt sluggish and rather cottony.  
The world seemed just a bit too sharp, a bit too bright, to be 
real.  He wondered if he really was caught up in an old movie plot.  
After finishing the drink, he was pushed flat by the woman.  He sat 
back up.  She pushed him down again.  He sat back up again.  She 
spoke sharply and quickly at him, and pushed him down once more, but 
left her hand hovering just above his chest.  She stared hard at 
him, almost daring him to try and get up again.  

"Just like nurses everywhere," he chuckled to himself, as he 
drifted off to sleep.

**********

It was very early morning when he woke up again.  He knew the time 
only because a few faint red rays of sunlight could be seen outside 
the windows, and it wasn't hot enough to be evening.  His fever had 
broken, he knew, and he believed himself to be on the road to 
recovery.  He was hungry, he was thirsty, and he had to relieve 
himself.  That last item was probably the most urgent just then.  
When he sat up, the woman lying beside him, the same one he'd seen 
before, also woke up.  Tom tried to make his needs known while 
looking around for his clothes.

The only thing of his that he saw were his were his pants, and they 
were hanging on a peg on the far side of the hut.  The woman got 
up, seemingly unconcerned with her nudity, fastened a grass skirt 
around her middle, and beckoned him to the door.  Despite his 
gesturing and his exclamations of embarrassment, she simply stood 
there and waited.

Feeling weak, run down, and rather silly, he went over and pulled on 
his jeans.  They were a little tattered, a little worn, and still 
had salt crusted on them, but they were his, and they provided some 
much needed psychological comfort.  He certainly didn't need them 
to keep warm.

Before he ended up embarrassing himself, she showed him the communal 
latrine.  Afterwards, he looked around to see what he could of his 
surroundings.  They were standing at the edge of a grass hut 
village, containing maybe fifteen or twenty small shacks about the 
same size as the one he'd woken up in, along with two or three 
larger structures.  The only other person he saw in that faint 
morning light was another woman, one considerably older than his 
nurse.  Aside from some birds, himself, and the two ladies, the 
place appeared deserted.

The first woman walked him back to the hut he'd woken in and made 
him strip and get back into bed - or rather, back onto the mat and 
under the palm blankets.  She busied herself for a few minutes, 
ignoring him, before bringing over some sliced fruits and more of 
the sweet liquid he'd been getting.

After he finished, despite the fact that he didn't think he was 
tired, he fell back to sleep.

                                **********

                           =====================
                                 Amazonia
                              by Tom Bombadil  
                                Section 1a
                                   -30-


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