“I don’t see how any good would have come from that.”
“At least Goose would know he has someone on his side.” Danielle clung to the thought that Goose was alive. Some of the Rangers she’d talked to after the helicopters reached Sanliurfa had assured her Goose had the training to survive a fall like that. In her mind, she pictured Goose holed up somewhere awaiting rescue. She knew that wasn’t the case, though. If Goose Gander was able to walk-or drag himself-he’d be on his way to the city. To his unit.
“No,” Pete disagreed calmly. “If you’d fallen and survived, he’d have one more person to look after.”
Danielle frowned at him.
“Hey.” Pete spread his hands and smiled. “You’re not exactly Survivorman out there.”
Danielle took a deep breath and let it out.
“You don’t even know if Goose is still alive,” Pete said quietly.
“I know. But somehow I can tell he is.”
“How?” Pete studied her.
She shook her head, trying to figure out how to put into words what she knew instinctively. The problem was, it didn’t make sense even to her. “I just… I just know.”
“Spider senses?”
“No.”
“I haven’t seen a crystal ball.”
“No crystal ball.”
Pete smiled. “Are you crushing on the sergeant?”
Feeling guilty, Danielle started to say no, but Pete’s arched brows told her he already knew her answer before she said a word.
“Maybe a little,” she replied.
“He’s married.”
Danielle nodded. “Very married. He talks about Megan all the time. Doesn’t stop me from wishing I’d meet someone just like him. Or that he had a brother.”
“I suppose not.” Pete took a breath. “You’re not the only one. Me? I look at him, watch him, I wish I had a friend just like him. He’s just that guy, you know? That guy who, no matter how tough things get, will never let you down.”
“That’s why the viewers love Goose. He’s got that solidness about him. Honor.”
“Makes you wonder,” Pete said, “if all those religious people are right and all of us who have been left behind are locked into some kind of Tribulation, what is Goose doing here?”
“I did an interview with Corporal Baker right after we got to Sanliurfa,” Danielle said. “None of the television stations were interested in airing it. Corporal Baker said that some of the people were left behind because they were guilty of sin and had fallen away from God. But the majority were left behind because they weren’t true believers-they hadn’t brought God into their hearts and accepted salvation through Jesus.”
Pete studied the computer screen. “You put any stock into that?”
Danielle thought about her answer. She didn’t like talking about things like this, and she felt increasingly uneasy doing so. “I’m not sure. More so than before.”
“What about Goose?”
“He’s focused on getting through this war and keeping as many of his men intact as he can.”
“So he’s not a big believer either?”
“Not that I can see.”
Pete shook his head. “I wish I knew what to believe.”
“I know. Baker told me that even with everything going on around us, a lot of people still aren’t going to believe this is the Tribulation. They’re going to deny it and look for other reasons for what happened.”
“I suppose.”
“Baker also pointed out that faith is based on what you believe in, not what you know. If we knew the answers, we still wouldn’t have faith.”
“Sounds like you’ve been thinking about it.”
Danielle wanted to deny that immediately because that was how she’d always handled discussions about religion. Like the topic was beneath her. Especially since there was no clear-cut answer in her mind. She started to deny it again, then stopped. “Maybe I have been thinking about it,” she agreed. “But I still don’t have any of the answers I need.”
At that moment, the computer screen blinked, and the image came into clearer focus. Danielle leaned forward and studied the men in the vehicles below the helicopter. The image came from the footage shot just before Goose and the others had tumbled from the chopper. The focus was almost there.
“I got to admit,” Pete said, “this software package your friend put together is impressive. He could probably sell it to motion picture studios out in Hollywood.”
The software was designed to clean up images. According to Mystic, the computer hacker Danielle had struck up a relationship with a few years ago while pursuing a story, the program filled in missing details based on references gleaned from the rest of the image as well as a large data bank.
“I don’t know that much about software,” Danielle admitted.
“Well, take it from me-what this guy is doing is computer magic. Not impossible, and other people have probably got similar software, but I’d hate to have to pay for it.”
Another SCUD hit nearby and caused the building to shake. Ceiling tiles smashed against the floor. This time the ceiling fan that had threatened to tear loose since the beginning of the attack crashed to the floor. Jagged glass shrapnel flew in all directions.
33
Outside Harran
Sanliurfa Province, Turkey
Local Time 1036 Hours
Goose held his position next to a thick-boled tree and took deliberate aim. The M-4A1’s open sights bracketed the head of the mercenary standing where the big white man and the black man had stood only moments ago. Letting out half a breath, Goose squeezed the trigger once and trusted his sharpshooting skills.
The man fell backward with a bullet hole high in his forehead.
Three down, Goose thought grimly.
As the sound of the shot echoed through the forest, the first raindrops zipped through the leafy branches of the tall trees and spattered against the backs of Goose’s hands and neck.
Thunder rumbled in the distance and reminded him of the Syrian armor rolling against Sanliurfa. He forced that out of his mind. The Rangers would hold there. The rain would come in time. Things would be fine until he got back. He had to believe that.
With his back to the tree, hidden within the undergrowth, Goose listened. The thunder made it harder to hear, and the pattering of the rain confused things as well.
Then there was no mistaking the cautious sound of a man’s feet sliding through the brush. The whisk- whisk-whisk of leaves against the man’s pants grew closer.
The man stopped. Goose knew he was only a few feet away, just out of Goose’s peripheral vision. If Goose turned his head to see the man, he was certain the motion would be seen. He breathed shallowly and waited.
Quietly the man shifted his feet. Goose knew then that he wasn’t a trained soldier or a hunter. Nervousness chafed at the man. Silence and forced stillness were his enemies instead of bringing him security and peace.
A moment later, the man stepped into view.
With the M-4A1 already at his shoulder, Goose moved the muzzle only slightly and shot the man just under the ear. The report of the gunshot shattered the quiet of the forest.
Knowing the man was dead or dying, no longer a threat, Goose shoved back against the tree.
A fusillade of bullets chopped into the tree. Bark splinters leaped from the trunk and spun in the air.