“I’ll put a dozen of my best men on it,” the man said eagerly.

“How many Chinese have you captured?” Seng asked.

“Less than a dozen, sir,” the man said. “One of mine dead—two of theirs.”

The airport was a bedlam of activity. The fires burned at the far end of the field against the tapestry of the early morning, and the sound of the landing helicopters added a surreal element to the quiet air. All at once, solitude had become a salvo.

“Listen carefully,” Seng said to the leader of the Dungkar forces, “this comes from the Dalai Lama himself. There will be no brutality or mistreatment of the prisoners—make sure your men know this clearly. Once this is all said and done, we’re returning whatever prisoners we capture to China—my company doesn’t want to hear of any atrocities whatsoever. This is a coup d’etat, not an ethnic cleansing. Are we clear on that?”

“Company, sir?” the man asked. “Aren’t you United States troops?”

“We’re from the States,” Seng said, “at least most of us, but we are a private firm now working under the direction of your leader. If you and the other Dungkar do what we order, in the next twenty-four to forty-eight hours, there will be a free Tibet once again.”

“You’ve done this sort of thing before?” the man asked in amazement.

“There’s no time for chitchat,” Seng snapped. “You all do exactly what you’re ordered and this will go as smoothly as possible.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Good,” Seng said. “Bring the highest-ranking prisoner to the main terminal and have him seated in a chair and guarded. We’ll be setting up operations there in the next several minutes—then I want to speak to him.”

The man shouted orders in Tibetan. The Dungkar soldiers lined up in rows. He explained what Seng had relayed, then ordered six sergeants to the forefront. Then one group led by a sergeant went off to round up the prisoners. Another split off to the helicopter Kasim had left.

“Hali,” Seng shouted, “take these men and wire the other hangars to blow if we need to.”

Kasim motioned to the troops and raced back to the helicopter.

The Bell that had carried Seng and King to the airfield was now unloaded. King motioned for it to lift off. The pilot ascended to one thousand feet over the field and then began to fly in large lazy circles. Two more touched down, and Crabtree and Gannon climbed out.

“What’s your name?” Seng shouted to the leader of the Dungkar.

“Rimpoche, Pache Rimpoche.”

Gannon and Crabtree raced over.

“Carl,” Seng said, “this is General Rimpoche. Tell him what you need.”

Gannon walked a few feet away to where they could hear better and explained. Rimpoche summoned a sergeant and a dozen men raced off.

“I need the supplies unloaded and taken inside,” Crabtree said to Seng, who pointed to Rimpoche.

“General Rimpoche,” he said, motioning to the man, “will take care of it.”

Seng unclipped a portable radio from his belt and switched it on, then spoke.

“Airport is under our control,” he said to Hanley on the Oregon. “What do you see?”

Hanley studied the satellite image on the screen before answering. “No troop movement yet—but if they do come, it will be from the road that enters from the east. There is what looks like a bridge about three-quarters of a mile toward Lhasa. Control that, and you’ll be able to make a stand if necessary.”

“No planes or helicopter activity?” Seng asked.

“None,” Hanley said. “Anything not on the ground there is far to the north. Even if they called them back now, you have an hour or so.”

“Good,” Seng said as Meadows walked up. “Reach me by portable if the situation changes.”

“We’re on full alert,” Hanley said. “It all comes down to the next few hours.”

Seng clipped the radio back on his belt and turned to Meadows. “Bob, take fifty troops and your weaponry down that road,” he said, pointing. “There’s a bridge we need to control.”

“Who’s in charge from their side?” Meadows asked.

“General Rimpoche,” Seng said, pointing to the man.

At that instant, three trucks slowly drove in front of the terminal and were motioned to stop by Gannon. At the same time, Tom Reyes walked over.

“General?” Seng shouted.

Rimpoche approached. “Yes?”

“I need four of your best men, crack shots and fearless.”

Rimpoche turned and shouted out names to the cluster of troops. Four men emerged from the crowd. Not one of the men was over five feet six. Dripping wet, not one of them could have weighed over 150 pounds.

“Do any of them speak English?” Seng asked.

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