could see the waves and allow for them.

Aft at flight control, the executive officer donned his headset and started talking.

'CAESAR, this is Panache . I am the flight-operations officer, and I will guide your approach. We have fifteen knots of wind, and the direction is variable. The ship is pitching and rolling in what looks like about fifteen-foot seas. We have about ten or fifteen minutes to do this, so there's not that much of a rush.' That last sentence was merely aimed at making the helicopter's crew feel better. He wondered if anyone could bring this off.

'Skipper, a few more knots and I can hold her a little steadier,' Portagee reported at the wheel.

'We can't run out of the eye.'

'I know that, sir, but I need a little more way on.'

Wegener went outside to look. The helicopter was visible now, its strobes blinking in the darkness as it circled the ship to allow the pilot to size things up. If anything screws this up, it's going to be the roll , Wegener realized. Portagee was right about the speed. 'Two-thirds,' he called back inside.

'Christ, that's a little boat,' Johns heard Willis breathe.

'Just so the oars ain't in the way.' PJ took the helicopter down, circling one last tune and coming to a straight course dead aft of the cutter. He leveled out at one hundred feet and found that he couldn't hover very well. He lacked the power, and the aircraft wavered left and right when he tried.

'Hold that damned boat steady!' he said over the radio circuit.

'We are trying, sir,' the XO replied. 'We have the wind off the port bow at the moment. I recommend you come in from the portside and stay at an angle to the deck all the way in.'

'Roger, I can see why.' Johns adjusted power one more time and moved in.

'Okay, let's move!' Riley told his men. They divided into three teams, one for each of the helicopter's wheel assemblies.

The deck, Johns saw, was not quite large enough for a fore-and-aft landing, but by angling his approach he could plant all six wheels on the black surface. He came in slowly, fifteen knots faster than the ship to start, and sloughing that off as he closed, but the wind shifted and turned the helicopter. Johns swore and turned fully away to try again.

'Sorry about that,' he said. 'I have some power problems here.'

'Roger, take your time, sir,' the XO replied.

PJ started again, a thousand yards out. The approach this time went well. He flared the aircraft a hundred yards aft to drop off excess speed, then flattened out and eased forward. His main gear touched just where he wanted, but the ship rolled hard and threw the aircraft to starboard. Instinctively PJ hit power and collective to lift free of the deck. He shouldn't have, and knew it even as he did so.

'This is hard,' he said over the radio, managing not to curse as he brought the chopper back around.

'Shame we don't have more time to practice,' the Coast Guard officer agreed. 'That was a good, smooth approach. The ship just took a bad roll on us. Do that one more time, you'll be just fine.'

'Okay, one more time.' PJ came in again.

The ship was rolling twenty degrees left and right despite her stabilizers and bilge keels, but Johns fixed his eyes on the center of the target area, which wasn't rolling at all, just a fixed point in space. That had to be the trick, he told himself, pick the spot that isn't moving. Again he flared out to kill off speed and inched forward. Just as he approached the deck, his eyes shifted to where the nosewheels had to hit, and slammed the collective down. It felt almost as bad as a crash, but the collective held the chopper in place.

Riley was first up and rolled under the aircraft at the nose-wheels. Another boatswain's mate followed with the tie-down chains. The master chief found a likely spot and hooked them in place, then shot his arm out and made a fist. Two men on the other end of the chains pulled them taut, and the chief rolled free and went down the portside to get to work on the main gear. It took several minutes. The Pave Low shifted twice before they had it secured, but soon they had two-inch line to back up the chains. By the time Riley was finished, it would have taken explosives to lift it from the deck. The deck crew entered the helicopter at the stern ramp and guided the passengers out. Riley counted fifteen people. He'd been told to expect more than that. Then he saw the bodies, and the men who were struggling with them.

Forward, Johns and Willis shut down their engines.

'CLAW, CAESAR is down. Return to base.' Johns took off his helmet too soon to catch the reply, though Willis caught it.

'Roger. Out.'

Johns looked around. He didn't feel like a pilot now. His aircraft was down. He was safe. It was time to get out and do something else. He couldn't get out his door without risking a fall overboard and... he'd allowed himself to forget Buck Zimmer. That door in his mind opened itself now. Well, he told himself, Buck would understand. The colonel stepped over the flight-engineer console. Ryan was still there, his flight suit speckled from his nausea. Johns knelt by the side of his sergeant. They'd served together on and off for over twenty years.

'He told me he has seven kids,' Ryan said.

Johns' voice was too tired for any overt emotions. He spoke like a man a thousand years old, tired of life, tired of flying, tired of everything. 'Yeah, cute ones. His wife is from Laos. Carol, her name is. Oh, God, Buck - why now?'

'Let me help,' Jack said. Johns took the arms. Ryan got the legs. They had to wait in line. There were other bodies to be carried out, some dead, some only wounded, and they got the understandable priority. The soldiers, Jack saw, carried their own, helped by Sergeant Bean. The Coasties offered help, but it was declined - not unkindly, and the sailors understood the reason. Ryan and Johns also declined the assistance, the colonel because of the years with his friend, and the CIA officer because of a duty self-imposed. Riley and his men stayed behind briefly to collect packs and weapons. Then they, too, went below.

The bodies were set in a passageway for the time being. The wounded went to the crew's mess. Ryan and the Air Force officers were guided to the wardroom. There they found the man who'd started it all, months before, though none of them would ever understand how it had all happened. There was one more face, one which Jack recognized.

'Hi, Dan.'

'Bad?' the FBI agent asked.

Jack didn't respond to that. 'We got Cortez. I think he was wounded. He's probably in sick bay with a couple of soldiers keeping an eye on him.'

'What got you?' Murray asked. He pointed to Jack's helmet.

Ryan took it off and saw a gouge where a 7.62 bullet had scraped away a quarter inch or so of fiberglass. Jack knew that he should have reacted to it, but that part of his life was four hundred miles behind him. Instead he sat down and stared at the deck and didn't say anything for a while. Two minutes later, Murray moved him onto a cot and covered him with a blanket.

Captain Montaigne had to fight the last two miles through high winds, but she was a particularly fine pilot and the Lockheed Hercules was a particularly fine aircraft. She touched down a little hard, but not too badly, and followed the guide jeep to her hangar. A man in civilian clothes was waiting there, along with some officers. As soon as she'd shut down, she walked out to meet them. She made them wait while she headed for the rest room, smiling through her fatigue that there was not a man in America who'd deny a lady a trip to the john. Her flight suit smelled horrible and her hair was a wreck, she saw in the mirror before she returned. They were waiting for her right outside the door.

'Captain, I want to know what you did tonight,' the civilian asked - but he wasn't a civilian, she realized after a moment, though the prick certainly didn't deserve to be anything else. Montaigne didn't know everything that was behind all this, but she did know that much.

'I just flew a very long mission, sir. My crew and I are beat to hell.'

'I want to talk to all of you about what you did.'

'Sir, that is my crew. If there's any talking to be done, you'll talk to me!' she snapped back.

'What did you do?' Cutter demanded. He tried pretending it wasn't a girl. He didn't know that she was not pretending that he wasn't a man.

'Colonel Johns went in to rescue some special-ops troopers.' She rubbed both hands across the back of her

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