I refuelled at Douala this morning in the rain. At this time of the year that's situation normal.

You just have to really careful with the fuel drains. Interestingly enough the fuel carnet worked. I had half expected it to be rejected.
I'd had a few ideas about things that had been going on but I had no real theories or anything to go on. Wandering over to the cafe' to grab a coffee I spotted the newsagents with a large poster for Time magazine. That's when I remembered! I knew I'd seen those choppers before! Time had run an article about the privatisation of the war in Iraq and the number of non-military personnel working there. The authorities couldn't get a reliable answer as to how many there were but it was around the 100,000 'private contractors' mark. One of the largest was an American outfit, I can't remember the name, but they were all ex-special forces types and worked contracts all over the world. Everything from Hollywood red carpet affairs to near all-out wars. There had been a photo of one of their aircraft, an MD500 scooting over some rooftops. Black with a broad diagonal white stripe! That would explain Mike and Ben as well. But Tony? What was a bogus business man doing running around West Africa with expensive bodyguards? And why did he need me to do his flying for him when he had all their aircraft available to him? Did the security outfit know he was bogus? or maybe he's not but what he's up to is? Yeah that's more likely. Maybe getting shot down had put a spoke in his works, and what was he looking for out there anyway?
Buying a coffee and guidebooks to the Central African Republic and the Democratic republic of Congo I made my way back to 'Golf Yankee', stopping on the way to drop off my flight plan. IFR Douala to Bangui via overhead Yaounde.

Punching up through the cloud I levelled at 10,000ft, got set up and pulled out the guidebooks to flick through.
Someone must be on my side. That book gave me the 'heads up' that changed everything from that time onwards. Just one little sentence in the middle of a paragraph that changed not just mine but several lives forever.
"30-50% of Diamonds leave clandestinely every year."
I had no reason, no proof, but it just seemed to make sense. Tony had been looking to meet someone and it had all gone pear shaped on him. He was trying to move or get something moved, and muggins me was being used to do it. Like I said, I had no proof and it seems far fetched but I just had a feeling that this was right and here I was flying right back into the dragons den with every turn of the prop.
Thinking it over I decided to carry on for now. They probably wouldn't be looking for anyone smuggling stuff 'into' the country, and I had no proof I was anyway. I'd do a proper look around when I got there. Maybe it would all be 'pie in the sky' stuff and I could forget it and carry on with my holiday. I hoped so.

Just before Yaounde the cloud cleared and I was treated to the marvellous vista of equatorial Africa. Vast jungle and savannah stretching away in all directions as far as the eye could see. I even spotted an elephant crossing one of the jungle clearings.
The whole of this region is the mighty Congo River basin.

It and all of its tributaries shape the land and the way of life here. From the highlands to the east along the Ugandan border it grows and grows until it finally reaches the Atlantic Ocean. The watershed and the forest it supports are second only to the Amazon. With the vastness of the forest, travel is primarily by air or by river but with the coming of progress - and the loggers - the roads are slowly reaching across. Most of them though are still dirt and totally impassable in the wet.
Bangui is the Capital of the C.A.R. but the country is one of the poorest so I hoped the Airport was okay. The charts look okay but who can tell.

After dodging showers again on the way in I landed on rwy 35 and taxied in to the ramp, parking in a corner well away from other traffic and out of sight of onlookers at the terminal.

Getting out I opened the aircraft right up. Where to start? I figured if Tony, or whoever, wanted to transport something but get them back easily then it would have to be somewhere well hidden but still quickly accessible.

Taking my flashlight and a screwdriver I started a walk round like "golf Yankee' had never seen before. I checked every panel and every rivet on every panel trying to see any marks or scratches that I couldn't remember seeing before. Man you would be amazed at how many nicks, scratches, dents, scrapes, cuts and sh1t there are on what looks like a reasonably clean aircraft. But nothing looked out of place or as if it had been replaced. Same with the engines, wings, tailplane and nose locker.
It was an hour and a half later that I found it.
Tucked right up inside the wheel well almost out of sight. A rectangular plastic box screwed into place. It was about the size of a couple of flush boxes. Dirt and grease smeared over it made it nearly invisible and I admit I nearly missed it completely myself. There was an opening at one end that looked like you had to pry it open with a screwdriver so that's exactly what I did. Then I let out the breath that I didn't even know I had been holding.
No explosions or sirens so that's a good start. Noting exactly how it had been on I eased the cover slowly off.
Attached inside secured against the aircraft was a black leather pouch about the size you'd keep sunglasses in. Despite the sweltering heat I felt chilled and just sat there for a couple of minutes staring at it. Undoing the twist ties securing it in place I slipped the pouch into my pocket, reattached the cover and crawled out.
Glancing about nervously I felt like everyone on the Airport was watching me.
Sitting in the right hand seat I opened the bag and tipped the contents onto a Jepp chart spread out on my lap.
Holy F#ck! There must have been about two dozen of them. ... 22, 23, 24. Yeah exactly two dozen rough diamonds. The smallest the size of the fingernail on my little finger and the largest two about the size of the knuckle on my thumb.
Chr1st Almighty! This was more than just sneaking a couple of diamonds out. This was a small fortune. No it wasn't. It was a bl00dy enormous fortune!
I was being used as a mule. A dumb beast of burden and expendable at that I bet!
Wow! I felt angry, I felt upset, and I felt used, stupid, and yes -greedy as well. I felt the whole lot all at once.
Think dumbass think! What to do? Should I turn them in to the authorities? They'd probably just end up back in the hands of some corrupt politician anyway. And how do I explain how I came by them? I'd probably be inside some g0dawful African prison for months while it was all sorted out. And if this was Tony's doing then I was going to get him! Maybe if I just chucked them into the grass and flew away? Nah someone was going to be looking for them and if they were not there then they would start asking questions, probably painfully too!
Blo0dy Diamonds! What did I know about diamonds? I sat starting to feel sorry for myself when I thought 'hang on, I DO know something about diamonds, or more specifically, SOMEONE who knows about diamonds'.
As the saying goes "don't get mad, get even". Well now I was going to start getting even and thought I had the beginnings of an idea how.
Packing up 'Golf Yankee' quickly I surreptitiously scraped a hole in the soil at the edge of the tarmac, dropped the bag in and covered it up. Scraping the loose stones around, it looked like the rest.
Then I caught a taxi into town. I needed to call Pat.
Pat owned a pub in the Northern Territory of Australia. I've been there a few times. It's what I call 'straight line country'. Standing in the middle of the road at the border of Queensland and NT under an empty blue sky, 4 lines run horizon to horizon. The road, the railway, and the powerlines and at 90 degrees the fence line. It's like being an ant on a billiard table. Attached to the fence is a tide marker and the red line is up at 10ft! Looking around, the only movement is the shimmering of the horizon in the sun baked air and the only sound is the wind. Try to imagine how much water it would take to fill this to 10ft deep! I had always wondered why the houses round there, a thousand miles from the sea, all had boats in the yard. Now I knew.
Pats' pub was one of those real timeless Aussie outback places. You know the type, two storied, corrugated iron roof with a wide covered wooden deck around the bottom. A couple of faded couches against the wall where you can sit and watch the dust devils. Mostly the local aboriginal kids hang out there or the occasional drovers dog. It probably was painted once but now it's the same red as the earth and the colour of the rust on the roof.
Inside is the typical old pub, almost a museum of drinking history. Mirrors with scratched advertising around the edges, faded photos of locals and long forgotten football teams. Half a dozen tables with scattered coasters and mismatched chairs. The usual dark wooden bar in one corner with a brass foot rail and - bless you pat - air-conditioning!
Yeah Pat did okay. He didn't make a fortune but had enough to get by and had a couple of the local widows on the prowl for him. He owed me big time for a couple of things and more importantly - he knew how to contact Steve. Just knowing that info was enough to keep him indebted to me forever.
Yes, Steves the one I needed now.
Sitting in the taxi as it bounced its way into town I thought about how Steve and I first met.
Steve was a pom. Short and skinny with dark hair and a pasty complexion. To the rest of us he just seemed an average sort of guy, nothing special, but goodness must have spilled the pheromone bottle or something when Steve was born. Streuth, the birds just wouldn't leave him alone. Even Steve didn't understand it. We'd ask him what it was he did but he'd just shrug his shoulders and grin.
It proved to be his undoing as well. His parents had moved to Amsterdam for work while he was still young and Steve grew up running wild around the less salubrious quarters of the city. Even at a young age all the working girls knew Steve and had adopted him as a sort of younger brother/pet. Anyway Steve being Steve he had his run-ins and grew up learning how 'business' was really conducted. When he told me the story he said he was into 'acquisitions and mergers'. He'd 'acquire' things and 'merge' into the night. Eventually he'd left town just ahead of the pregnant wife of a local magistrate! Piecing together other things he's said, I would say it wasn't his original passport that he left on either.
It was while working bar in Sydney that Steve met Tania, a tall stunning brunette with 'model' looks. Once again Steve's magic went to work and before he knew it she was head over heels in love and two months along.
Steve, being the reliable and upstanding type that he was - did a runner, heading out on the fruit picking circuit. Tania headed home to Melbourne and spilt all to daddy. Bad move Steve.
Daddy. Mr Eastermann. Big Lou Eastermann. Yeah that's right THAT 'Big Lou Eastermann'. What the Americans would call 'a made man'.
Nothing on the eastern seaboard of Australia moved that he didn't own, control or know about. Whether by Rail, shipping, air or especially by truck. Anything to do with freight. That was just the legal side of the family business. Casinos, kickbacks, extortion, drugs, you know-the usual range, made up the rest of the business.
Tania was the apple of daddy's eye and daddy was seriously not happy. Boy was that an understatement. If Steve ever set foot anywhere big enough to have more than an outhouse then he was dead meat.
Anyway Steve and I met while doing the grapes outside Merbein, which is near Mildura up on the NSW/Vic border. We were sharing a 10ft square corrugated tin pickers shed for the season. Sitting around in the evenings after work we'd have a few 6packs of VB or resches and chew the fat. Some evenings we'd sit down by the Murray near the rope swing and chuck rocks at the snakes and it's there that he'd told me the whole sorry tale. About his dad working in the diamond trade and all the girls he knew working in another trade.
It was about this time that word of his whereabouts got back to Melbourne.
Two weaselly looking fellas turned up one day at the hut. Luckily Steve was on the dunny round the corner at the time and out of sight.
"Hey kid you know Steve Thompson?"
"I know a Steve, don't know his last name though."
"Short, dark hair, skinny guy."
" Yeah sounds like him alright, why?"
"Where is he?" great manners these guys had.
Being an open and honest type of guy I immediately told him the truth.
"Went into Mildura about 2 hours ago, said he was going to the bank and then over to the baths for a swim. Probably end up at the pub if I know him."
As they got back in the car I asked them " you guys want to leave a message or something?"
B@stards didn't even answer, just spun the car around and kicked dust all through the hut and sped off in toward town.
We moved Steve and all his belongings over to an old pickers hut on the NSW side of the river back in among the trees and stocked him up for a couple of weeks.
The weasel brothers, as I'd nicknamed them, came back that evening wanting to know if Steve had come back yet. I said he'd come back and when he heard about his visitors he'd packed his gear and taken off on his bike headed west. Didn't say why.
I knew there was a major intersection not far that way so he could have been going anywhere.
After taking my name and giving me a split lip and a good thump, they left. I hid Steve for 2 weeks while I finished out the season. We dumped his bike in the river so it wouldn't be found - pity because it was a good bike. Then I smuggled him out of the district and eventually up to Port Douglass in Queensland where he knew a girl that would help him and more importantly would keep quiet about it.
I hoped so as I didn't want to end up on the wrong side of all this myself.
It turns out her brother had been forced out of business and badly beaten because he refused to pay 'protection insurance'. He'd moved to the Northern Territory and bought a pub. He would arrange for Steve to disappear for a while. That's where I had first met Pat. We had a few adventures of our own where I had pulled him out of trouble and he'd done likewise for me, but those are another set of stories.
Pat helped Steve and told me if I ever needed to contact him then I could leave a message, he'd get it through. I didn't ask how or where Steve was. Sometimes I figure it's best not to know.
But now I needed Steve.
Finding an Internet cafe that actually worked here in the center of Africa was less of an ordeal than I expected. Go figure. The machines were surprisingly up to date and the connection not bad. I guess the odd tyrannical despot occasionally gets something right some of the time. Quickly downloading an anonymiser program I logged through an anonymous hotmail account and sent the message to Pat. Then I spent about half an hour setting a couple of other things in motion before logging out. I wanted to be away as quick as possible as that little voice was now in full scream and it was saying 'get out, now!'. It was time to move.
Runups were done briefly on the taxi, hoping 'golf Yankee' would forgive me this time.
"M'Poko tower Zulu Golf Yankee taxiing for 17 vacating VFR to the southeast with 1008 and ready."
I noticed an official looking sedan racing up to the control tower. It was the typical movie type of thing. Black car screeches to a halt, two official looking types pile out looking right at me, turn and disappear in the tower door.
"Zulu Golf Yankee backtrack line up rwy 17."
"Zulu Golf Yankee lining up 17."
As I turned at the end the Tower called again.
"Zulu Golf Yankee return to the apron please."
I read back "Zulu Golf Yankee cleared takeoff, rolling 17."
An honest mistake, I must have just misheard what he'd said. Really!
Feeding on the power I accelerated down the runway to the accompaniment of the Tower Controllers continuous demands for me to stop. It sounded like several other voices raised in the background as well. I'm in the middle of Africa in a country that has 30 to 50 % of its diamonds smuggled out illegally with a fortune in contraband diamonds hidden in the wheel wells, an implausible half baked idea of whose they were and how they got there. And they want me to come back and have a chat? Yeah right Mate!

Levelling out at 1000 ft I headed over the river into the D.R. of Congo. I least I was in another country already. I hoped that would delay pursuit and muddy the waters as they are not the best of friends. After 20 miles or so I figured I was safe enough to turn east. I didn't think the antiquated radar they had would pick up a non-transponding primary target down low.
Quickly entering a direct track to Gbadolite into the GPS I set the autopilot and set mixtures etc. and let 'Golf Yankee' do her thing. I needed some time - time to think and time to let my hands stop shaking. Who tipped them off? and why?
Grabbing my flight bag I knocked back a couple of Panadol and some water, grabbed out maps and pen and paper and started to write. I only stopped when it was time to call Gbadolite tower for joining.

On the ground I was relieved to find no meet and greet committee so figured I had about an hour, or at least that was what I was going to allow myself.

I had now put together in my head more of an idea of what I wanted to do, so again taking a battered wreck that passed itself off as a taxi into town, I again hit the web. The www the worldwide wait! I wanted to hit the side of the machine. It wasn't doing too badly, but right now a Cray Supercomputer would have seemed slow. Eventually I had what I was after and printed it out, again another wait. I paid the attendant and gave him a decent tip to forget he'd ever seen me. Probably not much point but you never know.
I struck a bonus getting out of Gbadolite. The tower was unmanned. I must have been between scheduled flights or something. So I just played Nordo and got outta Dodge. I know it's not good airmanship, but I was operating on nerves and the big sky theory. Eventually though the cloud started to build up and dark was coming down rapidly, so I bit the bullet, called Kinshasa control, got an IFR clearance to climb.

They didn't have any messages or demands so I took that as a good sign.
Night fell rapidly as I slid in and out of IMC.

It's like flying out over the ocean in the dark. No lights to be seen apart from the periods between clouds when the sky positively shimmers with stars.
Eventually I joined for the ILS approach into Kisangani.

The runway lights seemed to float in the blackness and it was like doing a night carrier approach. The runway slowly growing, hardly moving, then suddenly you are over the approach lights and everything speeds up as the lights whip past.

Shutting down I leaned back in the seat. I daren't shut my eyes just yet or I'd be out. I still wasn't back to normal and all the adrenalin and heavy thinking had taken its toll. I felt like I'd had a six-pack. Damn, the fuel gauges were just about sitting on the empty stops so I'd need to take care of that tomorrow.
No one around now. Locking the aircraft I made sure nobody was nearby or watching and then I dropped and slid under the engine and retrieved the pouch from the wheel well. No point leaving it here, just in case.
Waking a dishevelled looking character sleeping in the back of what it said was a taxi, I got dropped at the nearby 'hotel'. It was probably first class around here - all the walls were still standing and it still had a roof. The room was a dump,a communal bathroom and the bed was little more than a wire hammock. I took it and slept soundly all night long.
These legs
Douala (FKKD) - Bangui (FEFF) 760nm 3.9 hrs
Bangui (FEFF) - Gbadolite (FZFD) 190nm 1.1hrs
Gbadolite (FZFD) - Kisangani 400nm 2.4 hrs
total 1350nm 7.4nm
Totals 14550.8nm 99.8 hrs