The darkness of the night seemed
to swallow the lights emanating from the boat waiting off shore at the Muscle
Shoals region of Alabama. The boat bobbed and heaved in the gurgling water
while waiting to disgorge its cargo somewhere in the ebony black of the night.
The cargo, six illegal immigrants never before out in the open sea, grew
greener with each pitch of the waves. Small lights could be seen toward the
shoreline of the Shoals, but these lights, not unlike fireflies in the southern
night, beamed on and off against the pitch of the inlets. This area of the
country was pocked full of little inlet coves and swamps providing some great
and out of the way fishing spots. But this evening the Shoals were being used
for something other than fishing, that being the transportation of illegal
aliens into the United States. The Shoals had a history of swallowing up even
the most experienced boater and tonight was to be no different! The boat’s
motor sputtered one last time, then stopped, allowing the transfer of people to
the smaller and more maneuverable airboats, which drifted along side the larger
fishing boat. Two of the transients desperately wanting to get ashore were
transferred into first airboat, while the other four ambled into the other. The
fans of the powerful airboats whirled into action and the two boats took off
headed for the inland area of the shoals. The four members of the lead boat, a
mother, father, and their two adult children, rode the waves hard and grew
sicker as the boat they were in bounced hard on the coastal waves. The second
airboat became separated from the first almost immediately due to the blackness
of the night. It moved more toward a
westerly route away from the first boat as the more experienced airboat driver
cursed for not taking the lead from the first boat. The two men, looking much
more prepared than the family in the first boat, held onto the side of the
speeding airboat. They checked their gear and waited for dry land to rescue
them from the rough ride. The boat ripped through the Gulf of Mexico’s blue
waters until it hit the murkier water of the inland shoal area. The driver of
the airboat, as if guided by Mother Nature, gently nudged the boat into a
slower speed and stood up to gain his bearing. Recognizing the giant weeping
willow tree he used for years to aid in his navigation of the Shoals area, he
cut his engine and the boat slid on the now smooth water toward the shore. The
boat hit the landing site and bounced up on dry land. The two men vaulted out
of the airboat, their gear strapped to their backs. They disappeared into the
darkness of the Alabama countryside without even the slightest of sounds. The
driver of the airboat, not even slightly concerned over who he just dropped
onto American soil, slid his boat back into the channel and nudged the engine
to start its purring. He engaged the throttle and the airboat eased up the
channel toward home. He was done for this evening, his fee for the “trip” being
paid in cash. He would celebrate, as he normally did, very hard. The money
wouldn’t last, but he didn’t care. He knew there would be more where that came
from! The first airboat, having been lost from the second, struggled to
maintain its balance through the rough water near the shore. The driver of this
boat was a little less familiar with the territory than the other driver. His
passengers were nearing the stage of panic and he knew he had to find an inlet
soon, lest he lose them to sickness. The girl, Shalia, who was in her early
twenties, leaned toward him and
seemed to beg for a miracle to the driver. He could barely see her in the dark
but knew she was green with seasickness. He shoved the stick forward and the
boat sped ahead. The driver viewed in the distance what he thought was their
signal light. Seeing the light, the passengers grew more excited. They knew
someone was supposed to meet them at a pre-assigned location and hopefully this
was the site. Their bodies seemed to react more positively as the boat edged
closer to the light. The airboat driver slowed the boat and eased it toward a
small dock. The light, now finally recognizable, was from a nearby house. The
airboat driver immediately knew he was not in the right location but he didn’t
care. He just wanted to dump his cargo and get the hell out of the area. He
bounced the boat off the dock and
ran forward to tie it off. He quickly looped the rope onto the pier and tied it
off. His passengers stood up and fought for their equilibrium, failing
miserably. They all fell in a heap! The driver leaped back onto the boat and
helped each one out of the boat and pointed to the light of the house. The girl
smiled her approval and nodded her thanks. The young man, Shalia’s brother
Renauli, clutched a small leather bag and ran down the small dock and headed
for the house He couldn’t care less if this was the pre-arranged pickup point
or not. He just wanted off the boat. The airboat driver, seeing that his task
was complete, jumped quickly back into this boat and took off. He fondled the
money in his pocket and smiled. This was more money than he had ever seen
before. He never looked back! Shalia and her parents, barely able to walk after
their long sea journey, wandered after Renauli. Renauli was always very
impetuous and had a mind of his own. He had his own agenda, unknown to Shalia
and her parents. Shalia on the other hand cared for her parents. She helped
them toward the safety of dry land and a new future. If she had only known what
lay ahead for her and her family. Their adventure had only just started!
The explosion ripped through the
electrical power relay transformer station just as the morning light exposed
itself from the night. The blast was powerful enough to be heard and felt up to
five miles away. The small relay station, on the outskirts of Dora Linda, New Mexico,
supplied electricity to the city of Dora Linda and to the adjoining air force
base. The air force base itself had many a time when seemingly strange surges
of power and energy would awaken the small town and its inhabitants. The city
was just awakening and this jolt went virtually unnoticed for most of life
around the county. But life in this corner of New Mexico was unaware of the
things to come. For life in this part of Americana was about to change forever.