'Make sure nothing else goes wrong. Understand?'
'Nothing else will go wrong.'
'At this moment, Stavka's backing is absolute. Also, that of our friends in the Politburo.' Rodin essayed a smile, then seemed to reject the expression as something foreign and worthless. 'But if Moscow were to be, by any means, made suspicious, even alerted— then Stavka would not go ahead with
'I realize that, comrade General. The high command will not openly defy the Kremlin — at least not yet. Not without
'Therefore, find this little man who has disappeared and kill him before the KGB or anyone else stumbles across him.'
'Yes, comrade General.'
'We must present those old women on the Politburo with a
'I understand, comrade General,' he murmured, contempt smoothed from his voice. 'We must succeed.' He paused, then added: 'We'll find this Kedrov and dispose of him.'
Rodin nodded vigorously. 'Yes, yes, of course. He has no means of escape or safety.' Then his eyes seemed to narrow to a closer attention. 'The army is gambling everything, Serov, in order to regain its rightful power — twenty years of power that has been thrown away or snatched from us by Nikitin and his cronies. So I do not want to step into a dog turd on my own doorstep, not now. Find this spy and get rid of him.'
Sunlight spilled whitely into the hangar, seeming to bring a more intense cold to the place, now that the booster's platform had gone. In the distance, the locomotives could still be heard, murmuring in protest at the weight and the effort.
Rodin nodded once, then turned his back and strode arrogantly toward the waiting group of officers.
'If your son hadn't been terrified of you from birth.' Serov murmured, then closed his mouth on the remainder of the sentiment. He would do his job, he decided, dropping his salute. He walked out into the sunlight, squinting.
He'd have Kedrov safely dead, long before Thursday. No doubt of that.
The main canopy floated on the surface of the translucent water, becoming sodden. Along the length of the sandbar, back toward the beach, the wreckage of the pallet lay like flotsam. A gouge in the sand, like the careering track of a huge, runaway vehicle, had been scraped out by the impact. Gant's awareness was calm, alert. Garcia and his crew had begun running leadenly out along the bar toward the stranded MiL, which was—
— poised. Still. He was balanced gently, hands and feet taking his weight, half out of the cockpit door as if about to alight from a bus. The pelicans' cries had stilled, the sea was calm; the Galaxy's engines had retreated beyond audibility. A strangely surreal silence bad pervaded the beach. It was almost dreamlike, except for the spars of wood, the darkly gouged sand, and the floating specks of Pelican corpses.
The intake plugs had held fast. Water had not entered the air intakes and thus the engines. All other openings remained sealed. Except for Macs cabin and his own. He breathed shallowly, his mind racing, as he watched Mac climb from the hinged canopy of his cockpit. The Mil was being rocked gently. Mac was turning his head constantly, like a doll, from the sand to Gant's face. He was treading gingerly as if through a minefield, but he was climbing out against the list of the helicopter. He should not cause it to slide farther toward the water. Unlike Gant, who could only exit from the starboard side of the 24D, into the sea—
— with the Mil moving after him?
He concentrated on Mac. One foot and leg over the sill, the slow, balletlike turn, the right leg, the pause, then the drop. Macs hands released the sill of the cockpit, and the Mil quivered. But did not move.
Mac looked up at him, grinning through the stained Plexiglas as Gant looked down.
'Easy, skipper.'
'OK, OK, Mac,' he snapped impatiently. He raised his voice, still poised in the doorway of his cabin. 'Garcia — where's my rigging kit?' he yelled.
'All over the fucking beach, Major.'
'Then for Christ's sake get it here.'
'What are you going to—?'
Gant felt as if the force of his anger and urgency would topple the Mil into the sea.
'I'm going to rerig the rotors — this baby has to be flown off the sandbar.' He looked down. He had no knowledge of tides. He stared into the slight haze and glitter, toward the beach. White sand, all white sand. The tide was not retreating, if there was much of a tide — he didn't know.
He glanced at the radio, then dismissed the idea of talking to the Galaxy. He studied the rotors folded along the MiL's fuselage. Five rotors, but only four of them needed repositioning. It was the only way, and if he didn't get it done, the mission had floundered finally and completely.
'Rigging kit!' he yelled. 'Fuel up your MiL! In that order, Garcia.'
'Couldn't we use his Mil to tow us off?' Mac began.
'Don't finesse, Mac. For Christ's sake, Garcia, get your ass moving.'
'What do you want me to do, skipper?' Mac asked, wading into the water and edging around the pallet until he was looking up at Gant.
'I'll need you when I start rerigging. OK?'
'Sure. Have we gotten enough—?'
'Clearance? Don't ask! I think so. Another couple of feet nearer the water and we've had it.' He was distracted. Silver fish nipped and glanced near Mac's submerged legs. 'Wade out there, Mac— how deep does it get?' If it was shallow enough…? He watched Mac's waist disappear, then the stain of the water creep to the shoulders of his flight overalls. Shit.
'OK, Mac.'
'Too deep, uh?'
'Too deep. We have to fly her off — she won't float high enough to keep the rotor tips out of the water. The droop on the blades will dip them below the surface.'
The parameters of the situation continued to narrow as they divested themselves of every shred of optimism. There was only one solution, but it appeared impossible. He had to rig the rotors. He needed Kooper or Lane and Mac around this MiL, and he needed, needed—
— fuel, the rigging kit, a rope. Rope first.
'Mac, get some rope off — get all the rope off the pallet. Don't release the chopper yet, she might slide right off We need to lasso each rotor to swing it into position.'
'Sure, skipper.' Mac appeared galvanized by the instruction, as if movement and purpose were reasserted and offered a satisfactory solution to their situation. Gant glanced across to the beach. Lane was in the water, pushing something ahead of him. The rigging kit, had to be. Garcia and Kooper were wearily rolling one of the huge fuel drums toward their helicopter, which seemed to sit besieged on the beach, surrounded by the fortifications its impact had dug for it.
'Come on, Lane,' he yelled. Lane nodded. He was skirting the sandbar, where the water was shallow, pushing the rigging kit ahead of him on a section of pallet, its buoyant honeycomb layer intact.
Mac unthreaded a length of rope, measuring it as he did so. He was as intent as a child engaged in some secret game.
Gant's mind spun out ahead of the moment like a spiders thread. The images did not seem to reach as far as safety. Rerigging, refueling, rotors having to be clear of the water, the necessity, he now saw, to use the other Mil to ferry the fuel out, the necessity to have that Mil tow out the fuel, across the water, without approaching too close to upset his helicopter with its downdraft. The tide, too…
He looked down. No edge of stained sand. The tide was coming in; how fast? Would the sandbar be