One down.
The second plant was a cell phone tower, about four miles to the northeast. There were several communications towers around the city, but this one appeared to be the least secure—the only one Jason wanted to risk taking out. A seventy-foot galvanized steel monopole that rose up from a remote field about a quarter mile from the road. A tower that transmitted cell calls in the northeastern quadrant of the city. There did not seem to be any guard, or cameras, just a tall fence surrounding the base, where the transmitters, receivers, and communications cables were stored. Strategically, it wouldn’t be a crippling blow, but psychologically, combined with the others, it would have an impact on Priest. It might force his hand and make him show himself.
Nadra had no problem climbing the fence with the two fifteen-pound explosives in her knapsack. Jason covered her through the scope again as she set them at separate locations—one to take out the transmitters and receivers, the other to take down the tower itself. Mallory crouched on the edge of the road, a hundred yards below Wells, watching both directions. At one point, he saw headlights in the distance, seeming to approach but then moving away on a southeasterly road. He turned back to the field. Nadra was running toward them again.
“Now for the main event,” Jason said as he got back into the car.
Nadra took the DPG and the tanks from Wells’s car. He gave her a ten-minute head start, then began driving back in the direction they had come, along the edge of the suburban homes. After almost half an hour, he came to the old logging road that would take them into the forest. Wells punched his headlights off and drove more slowly, following the turns in the road in the spaces between the tree canopies. The trees became denser, obscuring the sky; the road narrowed.
They reached the fork: two logging roads, one of which went right, to the north, the other, left, to the southwest. Nadra had taken the fork to the right; Jason turned left.
He drove carefully over the bumpy road for another twenty-five minutes, inching along at times, finally seeing the gap in the tops of the trees that marked the clearing. He let the car coast to a stop, shifted into park and got out. Charlie lifted one of the rifles from the floor and handed it to him. From here on, they’d make better time on foot.
Both men stood in the woods for a moment, listening to the silence. They could see the lights of the airfield through the trees now, across a shallow valley—the chain-link fence, the rear of the gatehouse and the hangar. They were facing northeast, looking at the back of the complex. “See you at 11:55,” Jason whispered.
He headed toward the clearing to the south and then into the deep forest on the other side, toward the spot he had chosen earlier.
Their targets weren’t people; they were cameras. Five security cameras mounted on towers facing the north and east sides of the complex, the nearest about two hundred meters away, the farthest about five hundred and fifty meters away. Wells would take out the first two, Mallory the other three.
Without touching the brakes, he turned the car around by reversing, downshifting, and slipping it into neutral, scraping against trees and running through shrubbery. Then he began to drive the way they had come, keeping the lights off. At the fork, he downshifted and went left, the direction Nadra had gone, but only for about twenty yards, into a thick forested stretch where he let the car ease to a stop on its own. He looked at his watch: 11:08.
He removed the rifle from the back of the car and started walking until he found the spot that gave him a clear view of the northernmost cameras.
Jason Wells fired first. Mallory heard the quick, sharp sound of the medium-weight bullet thudding into the first camera, and then the second. Followed by silence. He waited another four minutes, until Wells set off his diversion: a slow fuse gasoline bomb triggered with a small plastic explosive.
Mallory crouched then, and he aimed. Dialed an elevation into the 10-power scope of his rifle to correct for the arc at four hundred meters.
Sighted. Adjusted.
Fired.
He saw the bullet smash into the camera, the glass lens shattering, and felt a quick rush. Then he sighted the second camera, farther north. Adjusted his rifle. Dialed in a new elevation. Fired. Missed.
He looked south and saw the glow of flames beginning to light the trees where the dry shrubbery had caught fire on the ground below the pine and eucalyptus trees. He aimed the gun at the camera again as it moved slowly to its right, toward his position. Checked his adjustment, fired. This time, the bullet took out the front of the lens.
Nadra should be north of the airfield now, in the woods near the northeast corner of the fence. By the gas tank, waiting for a response.
Jason would be moving north through the trees, toward Nadra’s location.
A minute passed as Charlie walked back through the woods. Two minutes.
Charlie felt an apprehension after the brief euphoria. He reached the car and got in. Reversed direction, easing back into the thick shrubbery, snapping down plants and weeds and small trees. He shifted to neutral, then to drive, steering his way back toward the fork in the road.
Then suddenly the silence was shattered with bursts of automatic rifle fire—bullets slamming into the trees, thudding into the trunks. A row of stadium lights lit up the southern corner of the compound and the burning woods.
Mallory shifted to neutral as he rounded the turn, letting the car drift to a stop, then shifting to drive and pressing hard on the accelerator. The trip to the main road would take another ten minutes. Then fifteen minutes more to reach the northern loop. There was more commotion behind him, lights and gunfire. And then the rotors of a helicopter. But he also saw the fire spreading through the forest in his rear-view mirror.
Mallory thought about Nadra, lying in the woods north of him, waiting for Jason. Waiting to go inside the fence.
As he came back to the road, Charlie saw a procession of headlights in the distance and downshifted again. A dozen or so Jeeps, speeding his direction, toward the southern loop road and the south entrance to the airfield. Armed security, probably. He assumed the first phalanx of security people had already entered the complex from the western entrance.
The cars whipped past, not noticing him tucked into the edge of the forest. 11:33. Behind him, fire trucks and helicopters were responding, trying to put out the fire. The diversion had worked, but maybe not well enough. They needed a second, larger diversion. The gas tank. He pictured Nadra again, emerging from the woods with the explosives in her arms, running toward the fence.
Driving with his lights out, Charlie came to the northern loop road, an old trucking route, and turned left. He was traveling west now, parallel to the northern border of the airport complex. To the right of the road was barren scrub land that had once been soybean and maize farms. To the left were fields of tall weeds.
Twice, truck headlights came at him from the other direction, and Mallory pulled off to the left, finding a spot among the weeds and tree clusters to hide the car. Once, a chopper flew overhead, the beam of its spotlight combing the forest, sweeping across the scrubland and the road. Missing him. At last, he came to the spot on the left that Jason had chosen for him to wait. It was marked by a distinctive v-shaped tree top. Mallory turned toward it and shifted to first gear.
He let the car idle. Scanning the woods to the south through his night-vision rifle scope.
Charlie looked at his watch: 11:47. Nadra should have already planted the explosives by the fuel tanks.