âI used to get in your dadâs hair with that old Kaydet. But there was one day he and I brought medicine to a dying Dene. Just like Wop May and Vic Horner had done about fifty years before. We were friends that day.â
âSo that is you in the picture with him?â Casey asked.
âYeah. Like I said, we were good friends that day.â
They flew in silence for a while. Casey could see the juncture of the secondary road and the highway. On the highway, Casey spotted what he was sure was the car.
âMad Dog,â he shouted. âThat beige job just ahead. I think thatâs it.â
âWeâve gotta be perfectly sure,â Mad Dog shouted. âIâll go right down beside it and you take a look in the window.â
Casey couldnât believe a plane could get that low; he could see tiny cracks in the concrete.
âItâs them! Itâs them!â he shouted. An arm with a gun at the end of it came out the car window and fired: twice. One bullet tore into the top right wing of the plane, just missing Casey. Mad Dog pulled up the nose of the plane and made a slow circle above the car. He passed the radio up to Casey.
âCasey,â he shouted. âIâm going down again, right over the car. When I donât see any other cars on the road, Iâll pass over the car real low to shake up the driver, and when I shout, you drop the radio on the road in the path of the car. Theyâre bound to swerve and maybe even leave the road. Donât drop it till I shout. When I say âNow!â let âer rip.â
The car under them was swinging from side to side on the four-lane stretch of highway; Mad Dog was following a little behind. Casey could see another car, a van, approaching the thievesâ car from the opposite direction. Mad Dogâd have to wait till it passed. He chose his moment, lifted the left wing so Casey would have a clear view, swooped over the car, and shouted âNOW!â
Already leaning out, Casey dropped the radio in front of the car. The radio smashed into a million pieces and the car just rolled over it.
âOops!â Mad Dog shouted as he upped the nose of the plane and let the car get ahead again.
âGot anything else I can try?â Casey shouted.
âGrab that flare down there,â Mad Dog pointed behind his seat. âIâm not sure whatâll happen if itâs dropped, but if it goes off, itâll sure distract them.â
When Mad Dog signalled, Casey dropped the flare. It didnât go off; it didnât break up; it just rolled harmlessly to the side of the road. Mad Dog tilted the plane up again.
âAre we out of options?â Casey looked over at Mad Dog and was surprised to see him smiling.
âNot quite,â he said, reaching for a metal cylinder, âthis hereâs a fire extinguisher. Unscrew the cap and when I fly low over the car again, spray it on the windshield.â
Casey readied himself, and when Mad Dog was in position pressed the spray nozzle. Thick white foam flew back all over him, missing his face by a hair.
âAim lower,â Mad Dog shouted, getting into position again.
This time, Casey, with Mad Dog flying sidewise, and just over the car, leaned as far down as he could, and pressed the button again. The thick white foam covered the windshield, and the car swerved into the ditch. Casey looked back. The car was nosed into a large wooden sign.
âAll right!â Mad Dog yelled gleefully as he turned the plane south, gunned the motor, and headed toward Drumheller. âThatâll put âem out of action for now.â
Casey could feel the plane picking up speed.
âIâll be at my airstrip in a few minutes,â Mad Dog said. âMy vanâs at the end of the runway and weâll be back at Mountie headquarters in about ten minutes.â
âAwesome,â muttered Casey as they streaked toward Drumheller.
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