valid and important to the nation.

Finally Compton had to sit at his desk and place his head down. The strain was finally catching up with him and he was on the brink of exhaustion.

Pete Golding, the head of the Comp Center and one of Niles's closest friends, saw him and shook his head. He would let his boss get as much sleep as possible because he knew from watching him he was close to collapse.

On the many screens lining the curving wall and on the main viewing screen high above them, the expanse of desert kept rolling by as seen and sent along by Boris and Natasha, and still it showed nothing but vast emptiness.

Niles Compton was snoring lightly at his desk, his first sleep in forty-eight hours. His feet were propped up on the desk blotter, and this time the overworked director was making real progress with the much needed rest his body craved. The shifts had changed twice since they had retasked Boris and Natasha, and the results had been nothing but clear desert throughout most of Arizona. They were now taking wide-angle views of the small range of mountains everyone in the West had heard of, the Superstitions.

Pete Golding yawned and then pulled up a U.S. Geological Survey map of Arizona and used his mouse to place it in the right corner of the live feed from Boris and Natasha so he could study it and the terrain on the monitor.

'Damn closest town isn't a town at all. Chato's Crawl?' He shook his head. Chato had been a big man with the Apache a hundred odd years ago, a close friend of Geronimo's, if he remembered right, but what was this Crawl crap that tagged the name?

'Bingo!' a voice from the floor shouted out.

Golding looked first at the display and then quickly down at the row of operators who were gathering around one computer console. He hadn't noticed anything on the green-tinted, twenty-foot-wide screen at the front of the room that was showing the real-time feed from the KH-11.

'All right, Dave, what have you got?' he asked the operator.

The loud exclamation had startled Niles Compton from his slumber. He jerked awake with that odd feeling of falling one has when suddenly woken. He jumped to his feet and, wiping the sleep from his eyes, ran the three steps down to the main floor of the center.

'What have you got, Pete?' he asked, stretching his eyes wider as if this could make them less heavy. He slid his glasses on and looked.

'Nothing on the infrared, but look at the magnetometer from Boris, it's off the scale. Either we ran into an aboveground ore site or we have what we're looking for,' Golding said as he stepped back so Niles could get a better look at the display.

The digital readout for indigenous metal was pegged out at over 442,000 parts per square mile. The metal detectors on board the KH-11 satellite were using a lot of power to focus on such a tight area of the earth, but the results, though now a little weak, were very positive. Compton looked at the big projection screen on the front wall. He could see the huge rocks and boulders this mountain range was made of. But the metal the detectors were picking up was nowhere to be seen, indicating it might be indigenous metal just below the surface.

'You know, Niles, I was just looking at the U.S. Survey map, and do you know where this signal is coming from?' Pete asked, but didn't wait for an answer as he had a horrible feeling that his boss was about to do something dumb. 'That's the Superstition Mountain Range, you know, the historical myth of the Lost Dutchman Mine, it could just be either a gold or silver deposit we're picking up.'

'Okay, I hate to order this, but let's take a chance and go to maximum magnification. Let's get us in close and maybe we can pick something up visually.' Niles looked at the screen. 'And I want it tight on that small valley right there, because Boris and Natasha is having a hard time seeing beyond the surrounding rock walls.'

The other technicians looked at Golding, clearly expecting him to say something.

'Niles, a word please.' Pete took him by the elbow and walked a few paces away.

Pete glared at the worried faces until they returned to their stations and the work they were doing. He removed his glasses and started to clean them with the white shirttail that had worked out of his black pants.

'Niles, we've used a lot of power on this. Boris and Natasha is damn near out of fuel and the batteries are down to darn near nothing. The solar cells can't keep up with the demands we're putting on them, and we have nothing going into the batteries.' Golding looked at his boss and friend, then again at the main display as he put his glasses back on.

Compton removed his own glasses and used the earpiece to poke at his Comp Center director's chest. 'Number one, Pete, we have to take this chance and use what's left in her batteries to bring the lenses to a nominal position. We need detail on that section. The metal could be in that valley or so small we can't see it. Number two, I don't give a flying fuck about the fuel state.' He jabbed at Pete again, harder this time. 'And number three, if you don't do as I say and we don't find that saucer'--he paused a moment to lower his voice--'we could be issuing a death sentence to everyone on this fucking planet. And four'--he gritted his teeth--'if we have to, we get into cars and planes and helicopters and go out there and find it ourselves if and when we lose REC-SAT.' He put his glasses back on and stormed back onto the main floor.

'Lenses to full magnification on my mark,' Golding loudly ordered, startling most of the technicians, who in turn started immediately complying. 'Take communications to Boris and Natasha offline as soon as I give the word. I want a clear picture and I need that extra power when we reach maximum magnification.' Out of the corner of his eye Golding saw his boss gently shake his head, whether feeling bad for his being a bully to his close friend or for sacrificing Boris and Natasha, he didn't know.

'Bringing maximum magnification onto site four two eight three nine, elevation four thousand three hundred feet,' the man in control of optics announced. 'Satellite altitude one two zero miles.'

'Stand by to cut communications on my go. Remember, we'll have about three seconds of power from Boris to operate the lenses before he dies with the COM link. Another ten seconds of picture time from Natasha before everything goes, and with it, our picture, so be ready on infrared-and magnetometers, and I want video and stills on this. Let's fucking be ready.'

Niles knew how upset Pete Golding was. He had just given orders to basically kill Boris and Natasha, because without fuel and electrical power, the KH-11 satellite would be lost forever with a decaying orbit and no way to boost her back up without immediate refueling from the shuttle. But it couldn't be helped.

After the hastily relayed commands were sent through to Boris and Natasha, the picture cleared and they could now make out the small valley they had centered their maximum effort on. The infrared and ambient-light devices showed only rocks still heated from the day's dead sunlight. As they watched, the magnetometer shot off the scale once again, and Niles winced when he didn't see the wreckage he had hoped for.

'We lose power in five, four, three, two--'

But that was as far as Pete's countdown went. The picture turned to snow just two seconds off their projected time. The room grew silent as every man and woman knew they had just witnessed the death of the reliable old KH-11 satellite. Pete Golding slammed the clipboard he was holding to the floor, then kicked it in anger.

On the main screen and on several consoles in the computer center they saw the exact moment of death for Boris and Natasha. After the snow replaced the once clear picture of the earthbound valley, the test pattern for a lost signal came on the large screen as the communication link with the satellite was lost, possibly forever. Pete found a chair and sat down hard. Niles stood in a frozen stance and prayed he hadn't just lost their only hope. He swallowed and waited. The magnetometers had peaked out, but that could mean anything from indigenous metal near the surface to a malfunction in an already overtaxed spy bird.

'Goddamn! Old Boris and Natasha may have kicked the fucking bucket, but it sure as hell scored on its last play. Look!' Dave Pope, technical specialist for optical enhancement, yelled, and clapped. He quickly stood and jumped up and down and started high-fiving his assistants.

Niles's heart raced as he focused on the still screen to the right of the main viewing monitor as the operator calmed down and punched a few command keys, then a crystal clear image appeared. It was a still shot of the small valley, and inside it was the wreckage. It was scattered in a roughly two-mile stretch. It was metal alright, twisted into all different shapes. You could even see the point of impact and the crater it had created and the earth that had been plowed up in its slide before it fell to pieces. There were war whoops and whistles, and every man and woman was on his or her feet.

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