dropped back to his knees with a groan.
She ended up helping him. “Can you make it?”
“We’re going to get run over with UWD troops in less than five, so that pretty much says I’d
When Taggart moved in with a he’s-not-heavy-he’s-my-brother look on his face, Mike held up a hand. “I’m good.”
“Like hell.”
“I’m good,” he insisted and forced himself to stand up straight to prove it.
“Mike.” Eva’s eyes implored him to let them help.
“Mollycoddle me later,” he grumbled. “If we don’t get to the chopper pad and figure out how to stop it from taking off, we’re screwed.”
Then he headed out, ignoring the pain and their worried looks.
“So… not all of the soldiers headed for the mine.” Cooper passed the binoculars to Mike.
They were on their bellies, using a berm on the target range for concealment as they checked out the helicopter pad. Their sense of urgency magnified when they saw the big Chinook and the third semi parked beside it. Heavily tattooed, machine gun–toting men guarded it while UWD members offloaded guns from the semi to the chopper.
“I make six La Linea total—three at the front, three at the rear.” Cooper scanned the area. “As many UWDs doing the grunt work. And, lookie who just showed up to protect their investment.”
“Brewster and Lawson,” Mike speculated correctly. “Psycho babe there, too?”
“Yup. And their new business associates don’t look any too happy.”
Mike lifted his rifle, sighted through the scope, and found the men involved in the big powwow in his sites. He didn’t have to hear the conversation to know there were a lot of threats being made on the La Linea side, and a lot of cajoling coming from Brewster and Lawson. If they couldn’t control and contain their own compound, how could the cartel count on them to deliver on future shipments?
“Can we say, ‘ass in a sling’?” Beside him, Taggart also sighted through his rifle scope.
“Wonder how they’re explaining how they couldn’t contain four hostages—one of them a woman.” Eva sounded a lot more calm than Mike felt, since it was a pretty safe bet that they’d undoubtedly launched a full-out manhunt. They were still a long ways from being out of the woods.
“So,” Mike moved wrong, then silently cursed the pain in his ribs that was steadily getting worse. “What’s the plan?”
“You’re the chopper pilot. How do we keep it grounded—no, wait.” Taggart refocused the binoculars. “How do we drop it out of the sky? The semi’s pulling out and the main rotor blade is starting to spin up.”
“Forget about the rotors. Those suckers are strong enough to chop down trees.”
He thought about the bird’s vulnerabilities. “Chinooks are very slow on takeoff, so we might have a chance to keep her grounded. Eva—hammer the hell out of the engine. I’ll be right there with you. You two aim for the fuel tanks,” he said decisively. “They’re located right by the side wheels. I’m guessing the civilian models don’t have self-sealing fuel tanks, so they should be susceptible to small-arms fire. If we can get the engines burning, that fire will race right back to the leaking tanks and we might get lucky. And now, by the way, would be good.”
Mike had confiscated an AK-47 from one of the guards at the mine site. He took aim and popped off several three-round bursts—and got immediate results.
The men on the ground by the chopper scattered and ducked for cover. Then, spotting their muzzle flashes, they fired back.
Mike ignored them, pecking away like a rooster after grit. Beside him, bellied down in the dirt, Taggart, Cooper, and Eva followed his example.
“Holy shit,” Cooper sputtered when several rounds zipped past his head. “Bastard’s either a deadeye or damn lucky.”
Luck was something they needed a lot of, if they were going to keep that bird grounded and keep from getting killed in the process.
Mike kept firing; burning sweat poured into the cuts on his face, fire seared through his side. It was dark, the nightscopes were difficult to focus, the distance was not desirable—the chances of them taking down the bird were growing slimmer with every minute, which meant Brewster and his boys would be on them as soon as the threat was over.
They were sitting ducks out here. UWD soldiers behind them, Satan’s spawn in front of them, wilderness in either direction. And him with a broken rib and,
He quickly ejected the mag and rapid-loaded a second thirty-round clip. His last one.
“She’s about to lift off,” Taggart yelled, his focus and his shots steady on the Chinook.
“Keep firing!” Mike yelled.
“I’m out of ammo.” Cooper lowered his gun.
Pick a doomsday cliche, they were living it.
Eva, rock-solid steady, kept her eye glued to the scope and methodically fired again and again.
But it was too late. The bird hovered, then lifted, and spun slowly skyward.
“Fuck.” Taggart watched the flight lights as the chopper gained elevation.
Mike roared in frustration and emptied his magazine, knowing it was hopeless—until the engine cowling blasted off the bird in an explosion of sound and a huge, raging fireball. Smoke roared out of the damaged fuselage, billowing in a black, spiraling plume. The chopper listed sideways, spun, dropped, and corkscrewed down fast.
“No way.” Mesmerized, Cooper stood, shielding his eyes from the white-hot blaze of fire as the chopper fuel combusted, and twenty tons of electronics and metal slammed to the ground and blew anything within thirty yards into fireballs, dust, and rubble.
“No freaking way did we drop that chopper,” Cooper uttered again.
Stunned, Mike stared at what was left of the Chinook. No one on the ground nearby could have survived that explosion.
The La Linea lieutenants were dead. The woman with the empty eyes was dead. Lawson and Brewster— dead.
His satisfaction was undercut by disappointment. The sonofabitches had gotten off way too easy.
“Listen.” Eva touched a hand to his arm. “Hear that?”
Above the roar of the blaze, the ammo in the bird exploding, and the blood pounding in his ears, Mike finally heard what she had. The sound of choppers. A bunch of them.
Mike looked up and finally spotted the flight lights of four Black Hawks zooming in. Their searchlights flashed on, the wide beams sweeping the crash site like a scene out of a SWAT movie. The remaining UWD members had to be running for the hills.
“You’re right, Cooper,” he said, grinning because he knew who had to be in one of those birds. “We didn’t take it out. Gabe did.”
37
“Do you know how much freaking paperwork I’m going to have to fill out to explain how a ‘borrowed’ freaking Black Hawk and a ‘borrowed’ freaking flight crew somehow managed to fire off its mini and shoot a freaking Chinook out of the
Mike sat on the bumper of one of several ambulances that had arrived at the UWD site on the tail of the