Danny pointed to his ears. He still couldn’t hear well.
“Zen is downstairs. In the basement,” said Breanna, pointing downward.
“Zen? They’ll get him. The Czechs are surrounding the building.”
“Here’s a helicopter with troops now,” said General Josef, going to the window. “It’s landing right across the street.”
Zen tried to turn his eyes and brain into a human video camera, recording everything that he saw happening around him, in case it would be important later. Stoner carried him through a narrow, twisting hallway that zigged out from below the building, ending in a set of steps. They were up them in a flash. Light poured over him — they were out in a small open area, moving across gravel.
He’d hit him as hard as he could in any vulnerable area. Then he’d try to get him in a stranglehold.
Zen felt himself thrown against a fence, being pushed upward.
He snagged a fence link with his left hand, then another with his right. He tugged — then felt his fingers being torn away. Someone punched or kicked his head. Zen flailed, but was hoisted up from the ground and carried over the fence.
Then he was falling.
He curled, and just barely managed to cover his face as he landed with a thud. The fall took his breath away, but he knew this was his chance — still free, he clawed at the ground, pushing himself like a crab.
Suddenly, he started to rise.
“Into the helicopter,” shouted the Black Wolf.
Breanna went to the window as the helicopter landed. It was a Mil Mi–17, an older troop-carrying helicopter used by many air forces in Eastern Europe. Painted in a light brown and green camo, the large helicopter spun its tail around as it set down.
The door at the side was open. Breanna watched, expecting troops or policemen to pour out, but none came.
Three men ran from the road that paralleled the castle grounds, racing toward the helicopter. One of them was carrying something over his shoulder — a person.
It looked like Zen in his old gray sweatshirt.
The man threw him into the helicopter head first. He rolled to his left, trying to push his way out, struggling. He grappled with his arms. One of the other men pushed him back into the helicopter. It started to climb. He rolled in her direction.
“Oh my God,” blurted Breanna. “They took Zen in the helicopter!”
77
“It’s just like a real plane,” said the Czech. “With real fuel and everything.”
“It
“You put him up to this, Chief?” Turk asked.
“Hey, not me, Cap.”
The Czech, who’d just finished loading the Tigershark with jet fuel, looked puzzled.
“It’s a real plane,” Turk told him.
“Captain Kirk,” said the Czech.
“Kirk is
“Very fast?” asked the Czech.
That was too much for Crawford, who practically exploded in laughter. He had to grab the airplane’s landing strut to keep from falling over.
“Uh, when you’re finished laughing, Chief Master Sergeant,” said Turk, “tell me when my plane will be ready.”
“You can fly it now,” said Crawford. Tears were flowing from his eyes. “Oh, God. Oh, jeez. Real plane. Real plane.”
Another maintainer, Tech Sergeant Paul Cervantes, came over to see what the fuss was about.
“The Czechs,” managed Crawford. “They’re too much.”
“What happened?” Cervantes asked.
“I can’t explain. It’s too much. And Turk—” Crawford started curling with laughter. “Captain Mako. He’s too much, too.”
“Hey, I’m glad I’m part of the entertainment,” said the pilot. He was more baffled now than angry.
“Hey, Cap, Shelly told me your gear’s like A-one ready to go,” said Cervantes.
“Thanks, Sarge. At least someone here is serious.”
Turk checked his watch. The Ukrainian minister wouldn’t be back for another two hours or so, but he had a lot to do — including figuring out who he needed to talk to in order to make sure his flight didn’t interfere with the rest of the air show. He was just about to go look for the show boss when his cell phone rang. He pulled it from his pocket, saw the caller ID, and flipped it open.
“Hey, boss,” he told Breanna, hoping she was going to tell him that Zen would join her for the fly-by.
“Turk! There’s a helicopter that just took off. It’s a Mil — it’s flying southeast. Southeast! Zen’s in it. We have to follow it.”
A minute or two later Turk pulled himself into the Tigershark’s cockpit.
“Engines,” he told the flight computer after plugging his oxygen and com gear in.
The top of the cockpit snugged down with a hard
The aircraft claimed it was in the green. That was good enough for him.
“Tower, this is U.S. Air Force Tigershark Oh-one, requesting immediate emergency takeoff,” he said over the control frequency.
“Tigershark Oh-one, repeat?”
“I have an emergency,” he said. “I need immediate takeoff.”
“I’m sorry, Tigershark. We have language difficulty. Thought you said flight emergency. We have you at base, at hangar. Please restate.”
“I need immediate clearance for takeoff,” he said, pulling off the brakes. He rolled forward about forty meters to the end of a taxiway, jammed the brakes and pushed up his engine power. Then he checked the control surfaces.
“Tigershark. We have a line of aircraft waiting on runway twenty-four,” said the controller. “You can join line.”
“How many planes in line?” he asked, starting forward. The runway was off to his left. He zoomed the Tigershark’s camera in that direction.
“You should be six when you get there,” said the controller. “Or maybe seven.”
The hell with that, thought Turk.
He had an open taxiway ahead — a good fifteen hundred feet — three hundred more than he needed balls