“I’m not getting any response from the helicopter, sir.”
“Thank you,” Director Lay replied slowly. “Disconnect the comm.”
He looked over at the DCS. “Do we have another way of communicating with the teams, Barney?”
Kranemeyer nodded. “Nichols is carrying the TACSAT-10, a secure satellite phone made of sterile components. The phone was assembled in America, the encryption technology was developed up at Fort Meade, but everything else is European-manufactured. It-”
“All right, all
“Yes, director. We have.”
“
“He’s not answering.”
Kranemeyer swore softly. “It’s what I was afraid of. From the moment I heard about the SA-15 being deployed at the campsite. The team’s gone.”
“Sir, all due respect, but perhaps Nichols is just too busy to take calls at the moment.” Lasker managed a smile. “He’s been known to ignore us in the past.”
Lay turned, heading for the door of the Communications Center. “Keep trying, Barney. And keep me posted. I need to get word up to the President.”
“Right.”
They were gone. It had been too much to ask that they would
Harry stared out into the darkness, his eyes hooded with sadness. They were both old friends. To count them among the missing.
The memories. He could remember his first meeting with the Iraqi agent-
He’d been the one that had talked Hamid into joining the Agency when his hitch was up. And now he was gone…
“LONGBOW, SWITCHBLADE, what is the chopper’s status? Repeat, what is the situation at the crash site?”
“EAGLE SIX, LONGBOW. I can see the crash site from my current position. The missiles did not-repeat, did
“Then what happened?”
“The Huey struck the edge of the canyon and went down. It’s at the bottom.”
“Status?”
“In flames, boss. I see no movement. Copy that?”
“I copy, LONGBOW,” Harry acknowledged slowly, reluctantly. “SWITCHBLADE, make your way down to the crash site and check for survivors. See if there’s any equipment you can salvage, but move it along. That sucker’s gonna blow any minute.”
“You see any way down the cliff?” Davood asked.
Harry scanned the ground ahead of him, the dark rocks appearing a strange fluorescent green through the filter of the night-vision goggles he wore.
“Approx eight meters in front of you. Get on it.”
Fire. Blood and fire. Searing pain. Tancretti’s eyes flickered open as he returned to consciousness, flames crackling in the background. He was still strapped in the seat of the Huey, pinned against the instrument panel. It took him a moment to realize where he was, to remember what had happened.
The pungent smell of gasoline filled his nostrils and suddenly everything came flooding back. The warning, the crash. The explosion. Fear gripped him suddenly and he struggled to get free, pushing his body against the instrument panel in an effort to wriggle out.
“Jeff!” he screamed, the heat of the flames searing his throat. “
He turned his head, looking over to where his co-pilot had been seated only a few short moments before. The corpse still sat there, its head hanging at an obscene angle, a deep bloody gash in the neck. One of the rotor blades had sliced through the roof.
Tancretti closed his eyes, trying to shut out the vision, focusing on his own situation. He didn’t have much time left…
Thomas leaned forward against the rock, his hand cradling the barrel of the SV-98, squinting one eye as he swept the terrain with the scope of the sniper rifle. It had survived his jump intact, which was a miracle in and of itself.
A grimace crossed his face. The impact had jarred the scope. A target or two would be needed to sight it in. He chuckled wryly.
They would be forthcoming.
The Huey had nearly broken in half on impact, Davood realized as he hurried down into the canyon. He still hadn’t found his rifle. No time to worry about that.
Not now.
Flames were licking feverishly at the metal skin of the Huey, eating away at the helicopter. It couldn’t be long before the gasoline tank went up. He needed to hurry.
There was
A figure advanced out of the night, dressed in camouflage. His hands were raised in the air, his only visible weapon a pistol strapped to his waist.
“
“Who are you?” Hossein demanded, ignoring the salutation.
“They call me BEHDIN,” the figure responded quietly, switching from Arabic into perfect Farsi. “Does that mean anything to you?”
“
Oh, yes, it meant much to him.
“What do you bring me?”
“You’ll never find them unless you can track them.” The man gestured to his belt. “May I?”
“Of course,” the major replied. The man’s hands moved to his waist, unclipping a small camouflage case. A wire ran from the case to his ear. He handed both to Hossein.
“Take this radio,” he instructed. “The frequencies are set to the band used by the American team. The access code is Alpha-One-Tango-Niner. You can listen in.”
“And what will you tell them?”
The sleeper smiled briefly. “That it broke, and I lost it in the darkness.”
“Good.”
A glance over his shoulder. “I must go.”
“Allah go with you, BEHDIN.”
“He will. And if I should be forced to shoot any of your men, they will be ushered into Paradise.”