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Lundyn Parker's greatest adventures - by JonD

 
Lundyn Parker and his best mate Roscoe Tanner are a couple of Aussie knock about types. During their incredible adventures they will, fight, root, eat and save society and the even the world from horrors unimiaginable. Loveable rogues but as tough as the land that bred them.

Lundyn Parker 2 24

February 27th 2007 22:33
.So apart from the government agencies keeping shipping away, the ship skippers themselves were very reluctant to come near. The tide washed hard up against the hull and tried to push it away. In this narrow stretch
Of water it washed through at over six knots. Restrained in both flood and ebb, it set up a dramatic wave of energy against the hull. To make sure the ship would hold fast it was run aground with the use of her bow anchor. She had run across the channel and dropped the anchor port side then as it bit into the bottom the helm was put over with engines hard astern and she was run up on to the rock. Then her anchor chain was slackened to allow her bow to swing with the full force of the tide, onto the sand bar. With months of tides having washed over her she was now well fast.


“Ocean Kings” crew were still held hostage on board in their mess room. All ranks including the captain or “old man” were bunched in together and slept on the floor. They stank but were occasionally allowed on deck to hose themselves off with the saltwater fire pump. They were well guarded, though it did not take a lot of manpower to do this. Two men constantly out side the door was sufficient. All matter of plans to escape had been made and dismissed as not feasible. It was just too hard to get out of their prison. At first they had banged at the door demanding one thing and another but refusal to listen dimmed their hopes after a while. They had television and books but that was all. The cook looked after the crew and the terrorists had their own cook that worked alongside the ships cook, keeping an eye on him as much as cooking for his own men.

Ali Ibrahim who was the leader of the gang on board was a close and staunch ally of Ramid. He had been with Ramid on many escapades and together they had advanced the cause of Islam and their leader. This time though, Ali could not see a big success. Yes they had received international attention for over two months. They had managed to bring the whole country of Australia to its knees. Financially and physically it was all but ruined and would take years to build up its resources. Mentally though the tough Australians were fighting back. The huge armies of volunteers were everywhere it seemed. Even out here on the reef they were still cleaning up the carcasses of the dolphins and whales. They were still out there fighting the fires and they had thwarted the plans for polluting the water supplies.


Ali was in the captains cabin. He did not think of it as such but as his own, he and his men had boarded and completely taken over the ship and it was his by right of conquest. If someone could take it off him? He smiled at the probability. “Just let them try” he thought. He had out the plans for the ship and was tracing the pipes that controlled the oil again. The oil was pumped on to the ship from an outside source but out of the boat by the sips own pumps. It was the mass of pipes and cocks that ran across the decks that he was slowly staring to make sense of. The tanks in the middle row of the ship could, he resolved, be pumped into the outside tanks once they were holed and had lost enough oil to take up more of the crude. These cocks could then have their handles broken off or seised so that they could not be turned off. Again the engine room door could be managed so it would not open without cutting through with an oxy-torch. This would be the best he could do the ensure maximum damage.


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Lundyn Parker 2 24

February 26th 2007 22:33
.Chapter 14

Ramid Ben-Artim was on the phone to his cohort on board “Ocean King”, things were not looking good. He had seen a big success with the fires and his dreams had been more than fulfilled in that respect. Even now, far out to sea the cloud was hanging like an oily mist in the sky. But the plan for setting off the chemical drums with charges to pollute the water supply had been a dismal failure. Failure he could and often had lived with, but this time it had come from an unsuspected source. The public themselves had fought against him. They had pulled together like nothing he or his planning committee could have foreseen. It just was not supposed to be able to happen that millions of people could just organise themselves as quickly and efficiently as the Australian population had. Now he had problems with the “Ocean King” the commander of his troops deployed there was not sure he could do what was required. It was just too big he had complained.

The “Ocean King” was a modern mega-tanker. It had a double bottom and sides which meant that if it ran up on rocks or was holed by another vessel it would still have an inside hull protecting the cargo. International law had been passed that all newly built tankers would be built this way. The explosions that would normally rip through a steel hull would be useless unless the internal hull could be breached at the same time. The tanker had twenty tanks built along each side and another twenty down the middle giving it fifty tanks overall. The middle tanks could not be got at from the sides as they were protected by the side tanks. Exploding from the bottom would not help as the oil was lighter than water and would not leave the hull that way. It would mean using the on board pumps to pump the fuel directly overboard but that did not have the dramatic effect of an explosion and the resultant spill. He as also unsure that his charges were strong enough to penetrate both hulls a total of forty times now that his plastic had to be stretched so far. Nothing but total destruction was going to satisfy him.

The internal spaces of the “Ocean King” had been filled with ballast water once the explosions were set. This had the effect of lowering the tanker in the water, it rested its stern upon a submerged rock and its huge bulbous bow deep in a sand bar. The bottom of the hull had only two metres of clearance at low tide. The huge form cut off the channel which was almost a nautical mile in width. The minor channels either side were also protected by the rockets on board the ship. If they had wanted to, and no ship owner did, risk coming near the “Ocean King”, none would survive.


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Lundyn Parker 2 13/4

February 25th 2007 22:33

Cheers went up from the nation’s lounge rooms as the fate of the crew and passenger of the little Beechcraft was realised. Men pumped their closed fist up and down into the air in a salute of victory. The Prime Minister and his immediate advisers had watched in cold clinical silence as the drama unfolded.

“It should really have been one of our F –18 Hornets that did that but at least Australia will not be blamed” said the Prime Minister.

“Ramid has sent a message” the man from ASIO reported as he looked at his own mobile phone screen. “He is activating the fuses on the chemical drums to poison the water.”

The Army general who had so far been very quiet during all the meetings, coughed quietly into his closed fist and offered, “we don’t think much harm will come of that. We have found what we think to be the entire missing truckload of those chemicals and deactivated the charges. If we missed any the explosions will at least tell us where to look.”

The Prime Minister smiled and rubbed his hands together. “Yes that has been incredible how people went searching for those drums. We could not have done it with out the volunteers. Now what is happening about the Ocean King?” This question was directed at the Admiral who was standing pouring tea from the service at the coffee bar.

The admiral turned his deep blue eyes to the Prime Minister and replied, “sir, we have the R.A.N. clearance divers learning every nook and cranny of the boat from plans we have from the owners. The owners have sent ten smaller tankers into the vicinity to stand by to take away any crude that escapes. We are expecting, anticipating if you like that we will not be able to contain the oil from spilling from the ship.” He took a sip of tea and continued. “It is a worst case scenario that we have looked at. Oil spill teams from Asia and the Pacific Rim are standing by with booms, pump ships and foams.”

“So it is up to our men in the frog suits now? Well lets hope that their training is up to the task,” with that the Prime Minister rose and that indicated the meeting was over.

The future of the Great Barrier Reef, one of the seven natural wonders of the world was up to about twenty men in body hugging neoprene suits wearing long fins, dive masks and compressed air. They were approaching the Ocean King in small rubber kayaks. Two miles from their target they would abandon the kayaks and swim to their destination.
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Lundyn Parker 2 13/3

February 24th 2007 22:33
That night the nation sat glued to their television sets, as the first positive shots in defence of the country were taken against the terrorists. Two US Airforce jets launched off the carrier “U.S.S. Enterprise” made contact with Faz Al’s charter plane off the West Australian Kimberley coast. The cockpit conversation of the two pilots was broadcast (supposedly live) into the nation’s lounge room as both pilots homed in on the private charter jet. In split screen vision the viewers saw the pilot’s line up on the jet and fire their plane’s air to air heat-seeking missiles.

Faz Al and his pilot had no idea they were on their way to Paradise. Sitting in the cockpit the pilot was only aware of his immediate surroundings and the height above sea level Faz Al wanted him to keep. Faz Al himself was intent on winding the sonar instruments and video taping the cruel scene he was creating in the ocean below.

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Lundyn Parker 2 13/3

February 24th 2007 22:33
That night the nation sat glued to their television sets, as the first positive shots in defence of the country were taken against the terrorists. Two US Airforce jets launched off the carrier “U.S.S. Enterprise” made contact with Faz Al’s charter plane off the West Australian Kimberley coast. The cockpit conversation of the two pilots was broadcast (supposedly live) into the nation’s lounge room as both pilots homed in on the private charter jet. In split screen vision the viewers saw the pilot’s line up on the jet and fire their plane’s air to air heat-seeking missiles.

Faz Al and his pilot had no idea they were on their way to Paradise. Sitting in the cockpit the pilot was only aware of his immediate surroundings and the height above sea level Faz Al wanted him to keep. Faz Al himself was intent on winding the sonar instruments and video taping the cruel scene he was creating in the ocean below.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #13/2

February 22nd 2007 04:02
The Prime Minister of Australia was in conference with his advisers. He was haggard looking with dark rings under his eyes from lack of sleep and most of his advisers looked much the same. The crisis was into its eighth week and apart from the good news on the chemical finds little was there to cheer him except for the incredible attitude of the population. He knew his country men had a tough streak but never had he imagined in his wildest dreams the pulling together of the masses and the way that they had organised themselves with little or no prodding from him or his ministers. It was an opportunity to make political hay while the sun shone but he was too willy a politician to take direct advantage of this. Yes he was seen at the face of the fires and even wading waist deep amongst the carcasses of the whales and dolphins. He was seen at the burial of the six SAS troopers and wore a black mourning armband for his whole country.
His main aim now was to stop the tanker tragedy from happening.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #13

February 21st 2007 04:02
Chapter 13

With almost every single volunteer in Australia mobilised, as well as the armed forces, fire, police and social services, official church groups working around the clock, the fires were still roaring around the country. Pictures from satellites showed a mass of cloud over the whole continent with no land at all visible. The cloud continued on over the Pacific Ocean and covered most of the Tasman Sea. The country had risen to the call. Those that were not working as volunteers were mostly running essential services. Going to work was not an option.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #12/2

February 20th 2007 04:02
Gathering up their instruments the three men made for the door waving enthusiastically to their fans. They dumped the gear in Lundyn’s 1955 soft top short wheel based Land Rover and drove off at a sedate pace, heading for Lundyn’s yacht, tied up at the local wharf. On board the general had them instantly in conference mode.

“My sources in the Asian intelligence and police branches tell me that the terrorists are demanding a huge sum of money and troop withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan as well as making other demands that are not even politically motivated. They have no intention of achieving their demands. They are only trying to ‘stir up the possum’ and get themselves on the news”. The general’s information was of course common knowledge but his sources were more accurate than the general guesswork of the news agencies. The general belonged to a loose knit community of old soldiers that had fought on both sides of many Asian conflicts. The Korean war, the Malaysian uprisings, the French and American conflicts in Vietnam and many other minor wars. These soldiers had all at one time been pawns of politicians and were now themselves either politicians, head policemen or spy masters in their respective countries. They had formed an allegiance many years ago and helped each other as and when they could.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #12

February 19th 2007 04:02
Chapter 12

Lundyn and his mate Roscoe were set up in the corner of a small coffee shop in their local village. A small space had been cleared and they were sitting on stools playing to a small but enthusiastic crowd of jazz aficionados. Roscoe had his massive paws wrapped lovingly around his acoustic guitar and Lundyn was playing his tenor saxophone. Roscoe had the unlit stub of a hand rolled cigarette hanging from his lips. And at a small table adjacent to them cups of cooling coffee and melted cheese

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Lundyn Parker 2 #11/2

February 18th 2007 04:02
The Country was almost on its knees. With trade all but discontinued and stocks of essential items unable to be moved from warehouses and freight yards, shops soon were opening only for short periods of time as they managed to find some stock or another to put on their shelves. Hoarding had not been noticeable at first, but was now becoming obvious as supplies started to dwindle and then all but run out. All homes had, where possible filled every container they could in anticipation of the water contamination still to come.

Nasser Amrat sat in his car in the top car park of the Westfield Liverpool shopping centre and looked at the holocaust he had helped create. His nose was dry and itching from the smoke in the air and his eyes were running and red from soot and cinders that were falling around him. The sky could not be seen in any direction he looked. The sun was trying valiantly to burn its way through the clouds of smoke but only managed to show as a red orb filtered through hundreds of tons of smoke, soot and ash. Beside him his laptop glowed eerily, its green screen lit with a map of the Australian continent. Thousands of fires had been lit from this one laptop and mobile phones that were attached to it. This one small device and one small unassuming man had created havoc and mayhem in one of the most prosperous and forward moving countries in the world. He, Nasser had been chosen to do this. He of all the recruits of Islam was responsible for the fall of the infidels. He took a swig of water from a bottle laying beside him in the car. He moved the lap top mouse keys to pick out further targets then suddenly his lap top froze! He switched it on and off. Removed and replaced the battery but nothing he could do would make it work. Well he would go back down to the phone company booth and get his back up. Then he heard the whoop, whoop, whoop of huge blades cutting the air about him. He had left his car to start to make his way down to the lower levels. He instinctively understood what was happening. He reached in his pocket for his keys and flicked the auto lock open on his car doors and slid into the drivers seat. He locked the doors and reached into the glove compartment for his copy of the Koran. His other hand snaked over to the console enclosing a large black button. His whole car was ringed with plastic explosive. Inside all the doors, the boot and under every seat. Enough explosive to blow every car off the car park roof. His mouth was dry and his penis, strangely started to come erect as his blood flow became restricted with erratic, wild beating of his heart. His throat was constricting in fear but in his mind he could make out the images of heaven and the music that would accompany his heroic entry and the smiles in the eyes of his promised virgin brides.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #11

February 17th 2007 04:02
Chapter (11)

The skies over Australia and much of the eastern half of the Pacific Ocean and Tasman Sea were covered in smoke. It was blown east from Western Australia, across the rocky and sandy deserts of the heartland, across South Australia, the driest state in the driest continent on earth where it picked up from the fires of the interior of the state and the Adelaide Hills and peninsulas of the wheat and wool belts. The clouds enveloped the Northern Territory and across Far North Queensland and the great Barrier Reef. The fires of the Southern States added to the cloud as the westerly winds and the high jet-stream picked up its share of the cloud and raced it at over three hundred miles an hour to obliterate the rising sun in the east.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #10/2

February 16th 2007 02:42
At sea and on the beaches, remote or even hard up against the cities, other volunteers worked under the direction of National Parks & Wildlife officers caring for the marine mammals that were in agony. Most were doomed to die and would do so quickly. Some were euthenased immediately, others were tended as humanely as possible by keeping them covered with sea water and at least floating with assistance where possible. Hundreds of thousands of dolphins and whales were affected and many had and many more would die. Only a very small percentage had any chance of survival. Little was know of their in-built sonar systems and less still about why they had been freaked out by the deep space program sonar developed by the US. Surf Lifesavers in IRBS and rowed rescue craft assisted where they could on their patrolled beaches. Many had taken time off work and were sleeping in the club house, working from dusk to dark with the only relief being the period of high tides.

On more remote beaches, board surfers formed loose knit units and from their boards or on the shore did what they could. Quite a few harbour and river beaches were also crowded with dead and dying animals. Local residents worked along side blue collared council workers who trucked away carcasses after too many had been buried above the high tide mark.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #10

February 15th 2007 02:42
Chapter 10

Joe Falk and his neighbour Peters sat astride their mounts high above the valley floor in the New England Ranges. They knew that the army had scouts out and looking for the fire starters they had seen. Having fought their own battles with the terrorist fires both men had parleyed and decided to get out and do a bit of scouting themselves. From horse back they could cover a lot of ground and though there were only two of them they also knew that almost all their neighbours were doing something similar.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #9/1

February 14th 2007 02:42
Within twelve hours the news of the terrorists demands had broken and the public could see the pattern emerge of what looked like a series of natural and ‘one off’ disasters to a large well controlled giant gun pointing at their heads. They did not like it! Some media took a hysterical stance, crying for revenge, but most took a sombre, stoical stand, listing the demands and the showing footage again and again of the fires, the weary fire fighters, the Ocean King stranded in place and more and more pictures of the water mammals in pain and agony stranded on beaches and writhing in the sea.

Churches of all denominations called for prayer meetings and though it was only mid week there was standing room only in the city cathedrals and most suburban and country churches that were not being used for fire fighter relief were also full. Countries from Asia, the Pacific Basin, Europe and Africa sent sympathy and countries where Australia had given significant relief to refugees of storms, wars and other disasters in turn offered manpower, the only relief many poverished countries could offer. This was in some cases accepted as a political thank you and pictures of black African relief firefighters streaming off RAAF transports and a cruise liner full of Indonesian workers arriving in Freemantle to help with the West Australian fires bought tears to some eyes but knowing nods from those that suspected that Australia had just allowed another load of illegal immigrants to cross her borders.
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Lundyn Parker 2 #9

February 13th 2007 02:42
Chapter 9

There are an estimated six million volunteers in Australia. All unpaid and working to help others in some way or another. Surf lifesavers, bush fire fighters, state emergency services, elderly person visitors, meals on wheels delivery people, church fete organisers, parents and citizens groups in schools and the list goes on. Some people belong to four or five volunteer groups at a time. They may be guides in a tourist park or historical home or regenerating the landscape with volunteer shrub and tree planting. Six million people, almost half the adult population of the country, offering about six to ten free hours a week to the community. This is a large and mostly unsung and untapped resource of quiet achieving heroes. Many save lives on a day to day basis as in a physical sense to prevent people drowning on a beach or talking to a possible suicide victim on the phone


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Lundyn Parker 2 #8/2

February 12th 2007 02:42
Many bushwalkers had been airlifted to safety, some people had been known to die in more remote areas but so far loss of life was minimal.
Houses, sheds, schools, farms and crops were being burnt out however and it was estimated that almost five percent of the bushland in effected states was under fire or in peril. Pictures of burning wildlife was being shown nightly along with footage of whales and dolphins doing their violent, macabre dance of death, orchestrated by Faz-al. This was still a mystery, what was the cause? Many animal behavioural scientists and boffins were interviewed and though many guessed none could guarantee the cause. How though, were the images of the distress of the animals being beamed to the world media, and at minutes before prime time news?

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Lundyn Parker 2 #8/3

February 12th 2007 02:42
.Lundyn, Roscoe and the General sat in a window seated table overlooking the wide expanses of Lake Macquarie. The sun glittered from a bright blue sky on to the lake, causing the wind ripples to flash like diamonds. Across the bay a fleet of yachts was forming a straight line as they approached a start line. Seconds after the puff of smoke from a starting gun the noise of the shot rolled over the lake to reach them. The yachts burst as one over the line and bobbing slowly it seemed at this distance, danced their way into the breeze, even now separating as each skipper fought for his slightest advantage. In the distance plumes of bushfire smoke plumed into the air.

A scattering of dishes began to litter the dining table. Bowls of fragrant jasmine rice, deep dishes of hot jungle style curries containing chicken, pork and beef. A large bowl of Laksa noodles in a coconut and curry sauce was swimming with slabs of white fish fillet, whole peeled king prawns, green lipped mussels and spiky cut squid tube pieces and crab claws. The fresh cut Thai vegetable leaves and herbs through out a heady Oriental fog around the men the younger of whom ate with relish. In his usual style the general picked gently at his food savouring each mouth full, chewing carefully to allow his digestion to be natural. As a yoga master and ………….. his body was a true temple and everything that came in to it or out of it was done with almost religious fervour.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #8

February 11th 2007 02:42
Chapter 9

Lundyn Parker, his life time pal Roscoe Tanner and their mentor, life coach and buddy “the general” were sprawled across two wooden forms of the general’s boxing gymnasium. They each had a plastic bottle of iced water and the two younger men were gulping with their heads thrown back to increase the openings to their throats.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #7/2

February 10th 2007 02:42

The captain of Ocean King gave the order to turn his tanker to two hundred and fifty degrees. This would line him up with the entry into Hydrographers Passage, a main channel to enter the Australian Great Barrier Reef. To do so without a pilot and particularly being the size vessel she was, alarm bells were going to be set ringing. Ocean King had not made any radio calls to any other ship or shore station since being boarded by twenty pirates as she sailed through the straight of Malacca.
The crew, were kept in their canteen dining room. They slept on the floor and used the adjacent toilet for their ablutions but they had no contact with the officers. The officers were kept to the bridge and they ate, slept and ran the ship from there. They were not allowed back in to their cabins from the moment the ship had surrendered. By now however the owners and ships agent were getting concerned about the whereabouts of their ship and cargo of Crude Gulf Oil.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #7/2

February 10th 2007 02:42

The captain of Ocean King gave the order to turn his tanker to two hundred and fifty degrees. This would line him up with the entry into Hydrographers Passage, a main channel to enter the Australian Great Barrier Reef. To do so without a pilot and particularly being the size vessel she was, alarm bells were going to be set ringing. Ocean King had not made any radio calls to any other ship or shore station since being boarded by twenty pirates as she sailed through the straight of Malacca.
The crew, were kept in their canteen dining room. They slept on the floor and used the adjacent toilet for their ablutions but they had no contact with the officers. The officers were kept to the bridge and they ate, slept and ran the ship from there. They were not allowed back in to their cabins from the moment the ship had surrendered. By now however the owners and ships agent were getting concerned about the whereabouts of their ship and cargo of Crude Gulf Oil.

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Lundyn Parker 2 #8

February 9th 2007 02:42
Chapter 8

Faz-al was leaning back in the rich leather upholstery of the chartered Beechcraft Baron. He had unbuckled his seatbelt and walked to the bar fridge to help himself to a bottle of iced water as soon as the aircraft levelled off from Williamstown. Now he was sitting sipping water watching the ocean. Under the belly of the plane a long egg shaped attachment dangled wires in the slipstream. He heard the pilot over the intercom say they were no approaching Port Stephens. He felt the plane come lower and then slowly bank over the entrance to the bay.

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