Trike Patrol - Irish File
A black and tan terrier, tied to a container, senses them. It is not a warning bark. It is a location bark. One of the oilskin men looks up, stares directly at the drone, then at the stack of pallets where the trike is hiding. He shouts. The others scatter.
On her controller screen, the four men become clear. They are wearing oilskins. They are hosing down a filter rig. The ground is black with chemical waste. Byrne feels the familiar rage—a cold, procedural anger. This is not a drug deal. This is environmental murder. This is the slow poisoning of the groundwater that feeds the local wells, the streams that run into the salmon fishery. Trike Patrol - Irish
Aoife glances at the small auxiliary screen mounted on the handlebar riser. The FLIR (Forward-Looking Infrared) system is the trike’s secret weapon. It paints the world in ghostly white and cold black. The sheep look like walking furnaces. The rabbits are blurs of static. But tonight, near the old pier at Ros an Mhíl, something is wrong. A black and tan terrier, tied to a container, senses them
He turns the vehicle around. The headlights cut a swath through the fog, illuminating the chemical scars on the land. He feels the damp seep through his waterproofs. He feels the ache in his spine. But as he guides the trike back onto the boreen, the wide front wheels tracking true, he feels something else: a strange, stubborn pride. One of the oilskin men looks up, stares
The response comes back crackled but clear. "Tango-1, copy. Units en route. ETA forty-five minutes. Do not engage. Repeat, do not engage."
Byrne does the unexpected. He does not flee. He drives the trike straight at them.
He vaults back onto the trike. Aoife is already on the rear seat, the drone stowed. Byrne twists the throttle. The trike surges forward, the front suspension soaking up the rutted ground. They burst out of the pallet yard and onto the grass verge. One of the men is running toward a white van. Another is throwing buckets into the back of a pickup.