The Maltese Falcon
Chapter 12 The car peeled away, kicking up a cloud of dust. Gertie stood at the curb, her duffel bag at her side, watching as the taillights faded into the distance. She faced it alone again. The airport was alive with activity. The smell of aviation fuel—hexane, kerosene, benzine—hit her like a wave. She felt dizzy. It was the smell of speed and altitude. She walked toward the hangar. The air vibrated with the roar of engines. A DC-3 Dakota, its olive-drab fuselage marked with a roundel of three vertical stripes of red, white, and blue, sat on the concrete apron. It was an old bird, a workhorse that had seen service in every theater of the war. Its skin was worn, its rivets pitted, but it was a machine of purpose. Gertie approached the outdoor waiting area. It was a tarpaulin-covered platform with a single wooden bench. A few people were already there. They were a disparate group, a rogues' gallery of characters. There was a man in a tweed suit, his hat pulled low, clutching ...