The lookout caught a quick glimpse of the bubble canopy of the helicopter a second before the port weapons pod erupted with a volley of four missiles. The missiles were small—only slightly thicker than a man’s arm—but their noses were packed with high explosives. With a six-foot plume of fire belching from the rear, the missiles raced across the gap and slammed into the side of the lead cruiser and severed the bow from the stern as easily as a machete through a pineapple.
The captain just had time to sound the alarm to abandon ship before the bow started sinking.
“NOW, Mr. Reinholt,” Cabrillo said as an alarm sounded throughout the ship.
Reinholt reached up to the console and pushed a red button, then took hold of the table next to him in a death grip. The
Lincoln, sitting in a tall fire control chair with a seat belt across his lap, shouted, “Yeah, baby.”
“We’ll pass abreast of the hydrofoil in twenty seconds,” Hanley said.
“Hit them in the pontoon, Mr. Lincoln,” Cabrillo said.
“WHAT the—” Ching started to say as he watched the massive cargo ship change directions. “Hard a’ port,” he ordered.
But before the order could be carried out, the
“
The missile battery on the bow of the
The
A minute after being hit, the
Captain Deng Ching was bleeding from his nose and mouth after slamming into the command console. He was in a daze from pain. The second in command gave the order to abandon ship.
“A helicopter just attacked,” the captain of the rapidly sinking harbor police boat shouted into a portable radio as he climbed into the emergency raft. “Our boat is sinking.”
“Understood,” the captain of the second harbor boat said. “We’ll come pick you up.”
“I’ll shoot a flare.”
“We’ll watch for it.”
Then the captain turned to a sailor nearby. “Man the deck gun,” he said quickly, “and if any aircraft approaches, shoot it down.”
The first time had worked so well, Adams decided to do it again. Once again approaching from the port side, he lined up the crosshairs on the second harbor boat and pushed the button. Nothing happened. Perhaps the starboard weapons pod had been splashed with more seawater than had the port. Maybe it was simply that the few extra minutes of time had allowed the fog and rain to seep into the circuitry. It could have been a glitch—this was the first time the weapons pod had been used—and rarely did a system work flawlessly the first time out.
Whatever the case, the missiles wouldn’t fire from the tubes.
The R-44 passed over the harbor patrol boat just as the sailor yanked back the lever on the deck gun and flicked off the safety. He pivoted the gun to the correct height and started shooting at the rear of the retreating helicopter. Adams felt the cyclic get mushy as a single bullet nicked a control rod to the main rotor. He flew away into the fog to assess the situation.
“Control,” he said over a secure channel on the radio. “I’ve eliminated one target, but now my horse is wounded and they broke my bow.”
Hanley took the call in the control room of the
He scanned the radar screen before answering. “Do you have control of the craft?”
“It’s not too bad,” Adams said calmly. “I think I can set her down okay.”
“We’re coming in your direction now,” Hanley said. “Blow the pods and bring the ship home.”
“What do you mean?” Adams asked.
“There’s a toggle switch on the weapons control panel,” Hanley said. “Flip up the cover and lower the switch and the racks will drop free. We’ll deal with the second boat.”
Adams started an arc toward the harbor boat. “Give me a second,” he said. “I have an idea.”
ACROSS the room, Juan Cabrillo was on the satellite telephone to Langston Overholt in Virginia.
“We had to sink the vessel closest to us,” he said. “But there’s a corvette and a frigate still to contend with.”
Overholt was pacing in his office while talking on the speaker phone. In front of his desk, sitting in a chair and dressed in full uniform, was a United States Navy commander who was attached to the CIA. “I have a naval officer here in my office. My superiors are worried about fallout if you attack and sink the other two ships. How far away from you are they?”
“We are in no imminent danger for a few more minutes,” Cabrillo stated.
“If we can stop them in their tracks,” Overholt asked, “can you effect an escape?”