Scanned & Semi-Proofed by Cozette
The launch of the shuttle Atlantis will
make history. Another triumph for the space program and a political coup: a
Russian cosmonaut is scheduled to perform the first spacewalk from an American
unit.
The checkout fail-safes
are all go. The mission is proceeding like clockwork. The team of American and
Russian astronauts are strapped in, the mission specialists in Houston see no
hitches. No one knows the real danger.
For as many
millions of viewers tune in to watch the countdown, there’s nothing to indicate
that what they’re seeing is a prerecorded show. Terrorists have taken over
Launch Control at Cape Canaveral and are threatening to blow up Atlantis in
less than three hours. . .unless their demands are met.
Only Colonel “Iceberg” Friese, the mission’s former
commander, invalided out with a broken foot, knows about the danger to his
crew. Unknown to anyone, he’s sneaked into the restricted zone. And now it’s up
to him to stop the clock before the countdown reaches . . . Ignition.
IGNITION
Novels by Kevin J. Anderson and Doug Beason
Assemblers of Infinity
Fallout
Ignition
111 Wind
Lethal Exposure*
Lifeline
The Trinity Paradox Virtual Destruction
*forthcoming
A Tom Doherty Associates Book / New York
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.
IGNITION Copyright © 1997 by Kevin J. Anderson and Doug Beason
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
A Forge Book Published by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.
175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010
Forge® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Pubhcation Data Anderson, Kevin J., date
Ignition / Kevin J. Anderson & Doug Beason. —1st ed.
p. cm.
"A Tom Doherty Associates book." ISBN 0-312-86270-9 (acid-free paper) I. Beason, Doug. II. Title. PS3551.N37742I36 1997 813'.54—dc20 96-29343
Book design by Richard Oriolo
First edition: March 1997
Printed in the United States of America
09876 5 4321
To the men and women of NASA,
America's space program,
who continue to ignite
our dreams of
the future
This book would not have been possible without the many contributions of the following: Milt Finger of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Tina Pechon, Manny Virata, and Bill Johnson of NASA Public Affairs at the Kennedy Space Center; Charlie Parker from NASA; Michael "Mini" Mott of NASA HQ; Dr. Kerry Joels; Lieutenant Colonel Chuck Beason; Major Lon Enloe; and Norys Davila.
Along the way, we also received valuable advice from Dean Koontz, Al Zuckerman, Richard Curtis, Patrick Nielsen Hay den, Joseph M. Singer, Brian Lipson, Amy Victoria Meo, Lil Mitchell, Scott Welch, Philippa Pride, Janet Berliner, Bob Fleck, Mark Budz, Marina Fitch, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Dean Wesley Smith, Deb Ray, Ines Heinz, General Tom Stafford, Joe Domenici, and, as always, Rebecca Moesta Anderson and Cindy Beason.
While we have done extensive research on NASA, the Kennedy Space Center, the Johnson Space Center, the European Space Agency's Ariane program, and other topics for this book, many specific details have been intentionally changed. The locations of certain buildings and facilities—particularly the Vehicle Assembly Building and the Launch Control Center—have been moved, and some NASA security procedures have been altered in order to preserve the integrity of these national assets.
Arianespace
Launch Center
Kourou,
French Guiana
THE THICK HUMIDITY WAS a magnifying glass, amplifying the sun's heat in the
coastal jungles of French Guiana. Just north of the small town of Kourou,
security patrols locked gates and inspected chain-link fences in preparation
for the launch of an Ariane 44L rocket, flagship of the European Space Agency.
On roads freshly bulldozed through the
South American jungle, khaki-uniformed guards patrolled the swampy lowlands of
the Guiana Space Center. One guard stopped to light a cigarette. Though armed,
the guards were complacent—unaware of the sabotage team deep inside the complex.
The Ariane countdown
continued.
Mr. Phillips sat on
the springy seat of his camouflaged Jeep and raised binoculars to his eyes,
carefully adjusting the focus. He wore an immaculate white suit and tie,
despite the jungle heat. His movements were spare and meticulous, as if he
planned each step down to the bending of a finger joint. He studied the
towering launch vehicle on ELA-2, the pad for all Ariane 4 rockets.
Impressive construction, he thought. Very impressive. Mr. Phillips pressed a snow-white
handkerchief to his forehead to absorb the perspiration that glistened there,
and tucked a strand of his dark hair back into place. If he didn't pay
attention to the small details, then the larger ones would defeat him.
The heat was
oppressive, unlike the cool dampness in Connecticut where he'd spent much of
his first life. He buried the momentary discomfort, moving past it as he had
with so many other obstacles before.
Beside him in the
Jeep, an eager young man with sunburned skin and a mop of coppery hair swatted
an insect. "Damn bugs," he said, then slapped the same spot on his
arm again and again, though the insect was most certainly dead. "After
this humidity, Florida's going to seem like paradise. Definitely."
Mr. Phillips gave him
a wry smile. "One mission at a time, Rusty. Please stop your
fidgeting—you're ruining my focus." Even Florida had miserable humidity,
but again, the discomfort would only be temporary. He studied the rocket's
contours as if it were a desirable woman. A tall spire with a bulbous rounded
head, the unmanned 44L resembled a shining white lance with four smaller
rockets strapped around its base.
Unfortunately, this
particular rocket wouldn't make it to orbit. Not today—not ever.
In front of him,
leaning against the hood of the camouflaged Jeep, stood Jacques, his hair so
blond he looked almost albino, though his skin had achieved a golden tan. In
one hand he held the detonator, a box no bigger than a pack of cigarettes.
Jacques had always been good with explosives.
Mr. Phillips pulled
out his pocket watch and studied the hour. Patience, he told himself. He
straightened his tie, then reached into his pocket for a breath mint.
Mr. Phillips heard a
rustling sound from the left and glanced up to see a khaki-clad security guard
trudging out of the jungle from one of the narrow access roads. The guard,
whose bronzed skin and long black hair showed his Amerindian descent, held his
rifle loosely; mirrored sunglasses hid his eyes.
Taken completely by
surprise, the guard stopped as he saw the short, formally dressed man sitting
with his companions in a Jeep. Mr. Phillips's mouth drew tight at the guard's
utterly dumbfounded expression.
The guard brought up
his rifle and swept it around. "Halte! Quest-ce que vous faites la? Je
vous arrête!" he barked in French. The entire restricted area had
supposedly been swept clean of bystanders.
Mr. Phillips turned
away from the intruder in annoyance. It had been hard enough slipping inside the
secure area—first the bribe, then the unpleasant disposal of the official who
had given them entrance. He disliked this additional inconvenience . . . but
Mr. Phillips had allowed for such contingencies in his planning.
Jacques tucked the
detonator into his pocket. Pretending to surrender, he lifted his hands above
his head and translated. "He wants to know what we're doing here, Monsieur
Phillips. His accent is very bad. He is placing us under arrest."
Mr. Phillips raised
his eyebrows. "Oh, he is?"
Silent as a cobra,
fluid as a deer, a lithe blond woman slipped out of the underbrush behind the
guard. From her waistband she slipped out a thin stiletto so sharp and pointed
it might have been an ice pick.
She moved without
hesitation, crossing the ten meters without a sound. The guard stopped as if he
suddenly heard something—then the woman struck, jamming the stiletto into the
base of his back. Without a word, she rammed it up his spinal column all the
way to the hilt, as if trying to dig crabmeat out of a shell.
The guard twitched
and jiggled like a pithed frog. His fingers slipped from the trigger guard, and
he dropped his rifle. The muscular blond woman jerked her wrist, and the
stiletto slipped back out with a wet pop. The guard fell to the muddy
ground as if unplugged.
"Thank you,
Yvette," Mr. Phillips said. "Your timing, as usual, is
impeccable." Nonchalantly she wiped the blood from her blade on the wide,
glossy leaf of a rubber plant and glided the stiletto back into her belt.
Rusty paid no
attention to the encounter, still staring toward the white rocket on the
launchpad. "We should've just had Mory use one of his Stinger missiles,
like we did in China. We could be back on the beach by now, having a swim.
Definitely." He gave a short, high laugh.
Mr. Phillips spoke to
him the way a patient father would. Unlike the other members of the team, Rusty
was not a professional, and Mr. Phillips had to cut him some slack.
"Different goals, Rusty. We proved in China that we can slip into a highly
restricted area. Here, we must demonstrate that we can plant an explosive
surreptitiously and detonate it at our convenience."
"But why not
blow it up now, while the rocket's still on the pad? Why wait until it launches?"
Rusty swatted at another bug.
Mr. Phillips shook
his head. "By waiting, we control the situation. Much greater
impact. . . much more exhilarating."
"Yeah,
sure," Rusty said, obviously not understanding the nuances—but then, the
redhead wasn't paid to think. "I just want to hear the ka-boom."
As blond as Jacques,
Yvette strode on her long legs over to meet him by the Jeep. Two sets of
water-blue eyes, the color of ice melting in the heat, locked together. The
pair spoke quietly in French; Yvette ran a hand up and down Jacques's arm. They
then kissed each other long and hard, oblivious to the rest of the team.
Breathing quickly, their mouths opened as they deepened the kiss with lingering
tongues. Jacques let his fingers drift in a tightening circle around the swell
of her right breast.
Mr. Phillips clapped
his hands. "Time enough for that later!"
The two broke apart,
glazed with perspiration and breathing shallowly.
"Let's keep an
eye on the clocks, everybody," Mr. Phillips said. "Less than a minute
to go."
The Toucan VIP
Observation Site at the Kourou launch facility was designed to accommodate
dignitaries, but Colonel Adam "Iceberg" Friese didn't see it as
anything more than a set of bleachers shaded by a canvas awning. Dust,
humidity, and glaring sun made sitting on the aluminum bleachers almost
unbearable.
It didn't matter to
him, though—he had been through far greater hardships as an astronaut. Now, he
was more interested in seeing the spectacular launch of the Ariane 44L.
But what made him far
more uncomfortable than the heat or the rustic conditions was the petite woman
sitting next to him—a powerhouse inside a pretty, trim exterior. Her short
brown-gold hair, though tinged with perspiration in the thick humidity, was
still styled just so, her makeup perfect. In his memories of her, she rarely
wore makeup. Now she looked every bit the administrator, working her way up the
professional ladder.
"At least you're
managing to keep a smile on your face, Iceberg," Nicole Hunter said
quietly out of the corner of her mouth.
"I'm here
representing my fellow astronauts," he answered, his voice cold. Like an
iceberg. She herself had been one of those astronauts, and a Naval aviator, to
boot—until her recent change of heart. "It's my obligation as a
professional."
"Yeah, we're
both such professionals." She wore a colorful but conservative cotton
blouse and skirt, panty hose that must have been hot as hell in the
Tropics—with earrings and a delicate gold necklace, for God's sake.
In the years he had
known her, even in their most intimate moments, Iceberg had never thought of
buying her jewelry. That had never been "Panther" 's style.
No, he pictured her
in sweats, jogging with him for their morning workout... or dressed in an
astronaut jumpsuit in the simulators at Johnson Space Center, her dark eyes
squinting at the controls, mechanically reacting as problem after problem was
tossed at her in the sims. She and Iceberg had been the best: part of a team,
confident of being selected for a shuttle mission . . . soon. It had been
enough of a shock when she had resigned her Navy commission to become a
civilian astronaut.
But then Nicole had
changed her mind and gone "VFR direct"— visual flight rules—into NASA
management, returning from a six-month special MBA program, and at Harvard, of
all places! A new golden girl on a fast track to become Launch Director for an
upcoming flight. And Iceberg had been picked to command the shuttle crew without
her.
A staticky
announcement in garbled French came over bullhorns mounted on towers near the
bleachers. Iceberg couldn't understand a word of it, but he could watch the
blinking numbers of the countdown clock as well as anyone. Not long now.
He fidgeted on the uncomfortable bleacher,
sweating in his suit, but vowing not to let it show. At least he wasn't in his
Air Force uniform; that would have been even hotter. And if Nicole could manage
to look nice under these circumstances, he could do the same.
He ached when he
looked at her, though he usually masked his deeper feelings. He just couldn't
understand her copping out to join the desk jockeys instead of hanging in
there, doing the real work for the real glory. Of course, neither of them had
ever been very good at compromising. It wasn't in the blood.
From the Toucan
Observation Site, Iceberg could make out launchpad ELA-2. The Ariane rocket
stood beside an enclosed gantry, a rectangular wafer shimmering in the heat.
The facilities displayed the European Space Agency's logo, a blue circle design
with bold lowercase letters, esa.
In the nearby seats, well-dressed guests waited, shading their
eyes and staring east into the morning sun. Some were local politicians, others
celebrities, and most looked bored in the sticky equatorial heat.
In the mountains
above the coastal lowlands, the locals had set up encampments, bringing fruit
and picnic lunches to watch the launch. Iceberg had heard it was a common
pastime around the Guiana Space Center.
The clock ticked
down. Tension built in the air. On the bleachers, observers squirmed as if they
could somehow improve their view. "Sure wish something would happen,"
Iceberg muttered. "Patience has never been one of your strong points,"
Nicole said.
The walkie-talkie at
Mr. Phillips's waist crackled. He grabbed it in annoyance; the entire team had
been instructed to observe strict radio silence, despite the encryption
routines the team had developed.
Mory's voice burst
out, distorted from the descrambling routines. "We're blown, Mr.
Phillips!" he said. "Some guard spotted me and Cue-ball. He tore out
of here in his Jeep before we could kill him. I don't know if he's radioed for
help yet."
"Bother,"
Mr. Phillips said. "Less than thirty seconds to go." A momentary
inconvenience.
Another voice came
over the radio, laced with an Australian accent. "Duncan here, Mr.
Phillips. Not to worry—I got him. He's about to drive over the . . . dotted . .
. line."
Muffled by the jungle
underbrush, a small land mine exploded with a crrump.
Mr. Phillips squeezed
the "talk" button. "Excellent work, Duncan." The other man
acknowledged the compliment with two quick clicks on the speaker.
"Ten seconds
left. I hope they don't go into a launch hold." Mr. Phillips turned toward
Jacques, who stood caressing the detonator box, Yvette beside him. "Be
prepared to detonate if the countdown stops. Otherwise, let's sit back and
enjoy the show."
In front of him, a
pair of sapphire blue butterflies flitted, oblivious to the monumental event
about to take place. The air was as tense as a held breath.
On launchpad ELA-2,
the countdown reached zero.
Four Viking 5
first-stage core engines lit off simultaneously in the center of the Ariane
44L; at the same time, four additional strap-on Viking 6 booster rockets fired.
Flames and white exhaust belched in a great fan across the launchpad. Clouds of
smoke rolled away from the concrete apron, enveloping the rocket.
Finally, loud alarms
began to blare far from the launch site, faded by distance and overwhelmed by
the blast-off roar. Mr. Phillips heard a warbling siren, but the Guiana Space
Center was so large he and his team would have plenty of time.
The white lance of
the unmanned 44L rose into the air on a pillar of fire, clearing the top of its
umbilical tower and heaving itself above its own toxic exhaust.
Jacques turned toward
him, the detonator box in one hand. "Now, Monsieur Phillips?" Yvette
clung to his muscular arm.
Mr. Phillips
continued to watch the marvelous rocket, astonished by the technological
achievement, the sheer power of the engines. An inverted Roman candle,
suspended by a glowing ball of white-hot plasma. "Exhilarating," he
said.
The rocket climbed higher and higher, picking up speed as it
struggled against the chains of gravity.
"Now, Monsieur
Phillips?" Jacques asked again, anxious.
"Yes," Mr.
Phillips whispered. "Now."
Jacques punched the
button to trigger the explosives concealed behind one of the Viking 5 core
engines.
As it rose, still
gaining speed, the Ariane 44L blossomed into a fireball, followed several
seconds later by a thunderclap that bowed the mangroves and jungle underbrush.
With complex
emotions, Mr. Phillips watched the expanding cloud of debris and smoldering
exhaust. A shame to destroy such an engineering marvel.
He stared transfixed
for just a few minutes, then shook himself. "A perfect performance. I
congratulate you all." He clapped his well-manicured hands.
"Quickly now, call the team to the rendezvous point before we're
discovered." He drew a deep ecstatic sigh. "So much for practice. Now
we start planning for the main event."
Iceberg bolted to his
feet, trying to determine what had just happened. An accident—or something
else? He had heard the faint alarms just before the launch.
Unable to understand
the overlapping French announcements blaring over the public-address system, he
squinted into the hazy sunlight. Flames and smoke roiled up from the distant
explosion. Images of the Challenger disaster raced through his mind. . .
.
The crowd on the VIP
bleachers moved about in an uproar. Emergency Jeeps and vehicles tore through
the jungle along muddy access roads to penetrate the restricted area.
Iceberg squeezed his
hand into a fist. Every instinct, all his training, told him to respond to the
crisis. Astronauts were taught to do something, not just sit and let the
world pass them by. But he was forced to remain where he was, a mere observer
relying on the capabilities of others. The frustration of being reined in, of
not being able to react, simmered inside him, but he ordered himself to cool
down.
This wasn't his show,
his mission, or his space program. He didn't turn to Nicole as he spoke, trying
unsuccessfully to keep his sarcasm under control. "Now that you're a
hotshot manager, Panther, I suppose you'd never allow something like
this to happen on your watch." He opened and closed his fist.
Nicole shook her
head, staring fixedly in the direction of the explosion. "Damn
straight," she said.
1
KENNEDY
SPACE CENTER
Six Months Later
ZERO-DARK-EARLY-3:00 A.M. on a launch morning, and the Kennedy Space Center was as
busy as Times Square on New Year's Eve. Passing checkpoints, a steady stream of
traffic crawled along the access roads—Kennedy Parkway, Phillips Parkway, NASA
Parkway—the chain of headlights glittering like a sinuous caterpillar.
Away from the
traffic, past the badge gates and barricades that blocked off the restricted
area from all but authorized personnel, a beat-up old Pontiac Firebird pulled
onto the scrubby grass beside the road, leaving tire tracks next to the many
others there. From here, the guard shack was within easy hobbling distance.
"Thanks for the ride, kid."
"Sure, Iceberg.
Be careful out there—don't break anything else." Iceberg grunted as he
swung his leg out of his little brother's car, moving far too slowly for
someone who, up until a few weeks ago, had been in peak physical condition. The
damned cast slowed him down as much as a ball and chain, covering his foot, his
ankle—nearly up to his knee. And all for just a couple of broken bones, little
ones at that. You'd think he was an old lady with arthritis, rather than NASA's
hottest astronaut.
Ex-hottest
astronaut, Iceberg thought sourly.
He gazed at the
illuminated space shuttle on the nearest launchpad, three miles away. Atlantis.
Under a brilliant glare of spotlights, white vapors vented from the
shuttle's liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen tanks. The launch gantry, the
massive concrete flame buckets, and the rest of Launch Complex 39A looked
surreal in the darkness three hours before dawn.
Only two days earlier
another shuttle, Endeavour, had been rolled onto the second launchpad,
39B. But that was for another mission. Somebody else's mission, so it didn't
matter to him.
The shuttle crew—Iceberg's
crew—would be suiting up, getting ready, eating their mission breakfast. .
. the people he'd trained with for the past year, led, cajoled, prodded, and
pushed into preparing for this launch. They were the world's slickest mission
specialists. Now they would have to make do without the world's slickest
mission commander.
His brother, Amos,
pushed his heavy-rimmed round glasses up on his nose. "Birth control"
glasses the astronauts called them, because no girl would be caught dead within
a hundred feet of someone wearing the old-style spectacles. But then, Amos
spent more time staring into video monitors than looking in mirrors. He leaned
over from the driver's seat.
"Just try not to
get me in any trouble, Iceberg," Amos said as a NASA security helicopter
flew low over the road, drowning out his words. Wearing a goofy smile, he
waited for the noise from the helicopter to abate. He removed one hand from the
steering wheel to smear down his mussed,
dark hair, though he didn't manage to knock a single strand back
into place.
"I wouldn't risk
you, kid—I'll just get myself in trouble."
Officially, Iceberg
was supposed to be at home, resting. Fat chance. Iceberg had called Amos, the
one person he could absolutely count on not to spill the beans.
A half dozen NASA
choppers patrolled the launch area, hooking out over the ocean to deter curious
maritime onlookers who bobbed on their crafts in the Atlantic. High overhead,
an Air Force C-130 special operations plane flew in a tight racetrack pattern
around the launch area, scanning for trespassers with sophisticated forward-looking
infrared sensors. Somewhere out in the jungle surrounding the Launch Complex
were security forces, but they could be miles away.
"Come to the
Space Society meeting next week?" Amos said hopefully. "You could
give your assessment of how the mission went. Besides, you owe me big-time for
this."
"If that's the
price I have to pay," Iceberg said. His thin lips formed his quirky smile
that turned up first the left corner of his mouth, then the right.
"That's
great!" His little brother sometimes reminded him of a puppy, wanting
nothing more than to be loved.
Leaning into the
front seat, Iceberg rummaged through his daypack. The tiny Walkman TV and his
snack seemed surprisingly heavy. He'd rather have brought a small two-way radio
to communicate with his crew, but that would have given NASA some extreme
heartburn.
"See you after
the launch, kid. And say hi to Cecelia for me. She's on shift with you this
morning, isn't she? No hanky-panky."
Amos flushed crimson
with embarrassment. "Some of us have duties to perform on launch
day." He pushed his glasses back up his nose.
"Sure wish I
did." Iceberg pulled the daypack out of the car and swung it over his
shoulder. He wore a light cotton shirt and shorts in neutral colors for hiding
in the underbrush. The temperature would rise quickly after dawn. Right now,
the air felt cool on his bare, muscular thighs, but the supposedly lightweight
plaster-and-fiberglass cast on his lower leg was going to get awfully hot
before long. He had covered it with a moisture-proof "moon boot" as a
precaution against the rough terrain he might have to cover. At least he could
walk on it.
Shutting the door of
the Pontiac behind him, he started hobbling toward the gate. The old car roared
forward and stopped briefly at the guard shack before being waved into the launch area. In
less than a mile Amos would turn off to the communications relay bunker nestled
within the restricted launch area. The kid's job was about as essential as tits
on a bull, but NASA procedures dictated that two warm bodies had to be present
to oversee the video relay during each manned launch, even though everything
was completely automatic.
A sign on a post read
RESTRICTED LAUNCH AREA—KEEP OUT! Iceberg made his way carefully to the guard
shack. Light from inside spilled to the ground through an open door. A
three-wheeled all-terrain vehicle was parked next to the small structure. All
around Iceberg, the swamp insects and frogs made a din as loud as a rock concert.
The guard would be
busy this morning, after letting so many people through, checking so many extra
badges. One might think the guards were more alert during the intense
launch-day preparations—but Iceberg knew to worry most during the slow times, when
guards were bored and apt to imagine terrorists in every bush.
As Iceberg
approached, keeping to the side of the road, a uniformed man stepped out of the
shack. The guard was nearly as tall as the door, thick-waisted, and sporting a
bushy salt-and-pepper mustache. The outside light from the shack shone down on
him. He put a hand on his hip holster as Iceberg's shadowy figure approached,
drowned out by the lights. "Keep where I can see you," the guard
said.
Iceberg laughed and
continued toward the guard shack. "Stay frosty, Salvador, you old goat. Do
they even give you any bullets for that gun?"
The guard relaxed,
then called out with a thick Hispanic accent. "Iceberg! What are you doing
way out here? You should have the best seat in the house on today of all
days."
"The best seat
is in the shuttle cockpit, Salvador—and they don't let you fly with a broken
foot." He scratched his dark brown hair, which he kept cut short to
minimize the hassle when wearing various helmets.
Salvador chuckled and
fingered his chin. "No, I mean in the VIP area, with the rest of the
important people at Launch Control."
Iceberg snorted.
"That's my crew out there, and no way in hell am I going to watch this
launch with a bunch of nonflying bureaucrats! You don't see any real astronauts
inside those air-conditioned rooms." He could imagine all the TV cameras,
the questions he'd have to field, the journalists with tape recorders urging
him to tell the "sad story" of how he had missed his chance to
command the mission through a clumsy accident. The reporters would spend more time looking at
him than watching the launch. A great "angle" for their stories.
Salvador lifted his
eyebrows. "I didn't know you thought your Panther was a bureaucrat. This
would be a good chance for you to see her."
"Just shows how
long you've been alone in this shack, old man," said Iceberg. "These
days she'd rather tear me apart than let me get close to her. Anyway, she goes
by Nicole now, not Panther." Eight months out of the corps and she had
become a true paper pusher, 100 percent. The ice queen is in her element
now. She'd keep herself so busy with all the dignitaries at the VIP viewing
area; she wouldn't even notice he was missing.
Salvador motioned him
into the cramped shack. "So you'll keep me company? I feel honored. Not
many people come up the east road through Canaveral." He shook his head.
"I'm glad I am not guarding the tourist gate today—what a mess!"
Iceberg grunted as he
limped through the door. Salvador had done the tiny security hut justice,
transforming it into a comfortable place in which to sit and keep watch.
Blue-and-white checkered curtains covered the windows; a cable TV tuned to NASA
Select showed a close-up view of Atlantis; four monitors with a video
feed from Amos's relay bunker lined one wall.
Salvador had pinned two rows of shuttle crew patches over the
door, his collection commemorating the numerous missions he had worked. The old
guard had been here as long as Iceberg could remember; he was as much an icon
as the old Redstone launchpads, now abandoned in place, rusted and overgrown
with the Florida jungle.
"I appreciate
the hospitality, old friend, but I'd rather be alone for this shot,"
Iceberg said. He set his daypack on the narrow counter next to the black
telephone, rummaging among the items there. "I'm going to go deeper inside
the site. I'll get a mile or so from the pad, find a comfortable spot."
He finally found what
he was looking for. He pulled out a hand-sized patch with the embroidered
picture of an eagle and bear reaching toward the stars. "You need one of
these for your collection. It's one of the original crew patches, still has my
name on it—only six in existence, far as I know."
Placing his coffee on
the desk, Salvador reached for the patch. He squinted, then grinned like a kid
who had just found a rare baseball card as he spotted the names FRIESE, GREEN,
BURNS embroidered at the top. "This is even more of a collector's
item!"
Iceberg smiled back
wearily. "Up until a week ago, they planned to make thousands of those.
But now, my friend, you have one of the only such patches ever made. The rest
have Dr. Marc Franklin's name on them."
The sound of NASA
security helicopters droned in the background, scanning the grounds with
infrared seekers; before long, the sun would rise and play havoc with the IR
spotting scopes. High clouds over the launch area were tinged with pink, like
cotton candy; in the east the ocean glowed a dull red at the horizon.
Iceberg struggled to
his feet and shouldered the pack. "Got to get going."
Salvador sipped his coffee, still admiring the rare mission patch.
He nodded to the array of security TV monitors. "Be careful of my sensors.
I'd rather you didn't trip an alarm and get me fired!"
"Don't
worry." Iceberg laughed. "I know how to get around this place with my
eyes closed."
"It's not just
the sensors," Salvador called after him. "Watch out for the
alligators and wild pigs and snakes—they can creep up on you when you're off
the road."
"They won't want
to mess with me." Turning toward the shuttle, Iceberg saw the jungle
spread out before him, dense and difficult to cross. He struck out toward the
waiting behemoth, dazzling in the spotlights. Soon, the Atlantis crew
would be taking their places, ready for launch. His crew.
Without him.
2
JACQUES FELT SWEAT CLING to his white "bunny suit" as he rode the elevator
up the giant Fixed Support Structure on the launchpad. The humid Florida air
remained cool before dawn, much more pleasant than the equatorial jungles of
French Guiana. But he still felt as if he were in a pressure cooker. He worked
well under pressure.
Two other
NASA technicians—real ones—shared the open-framework
elevator with him, telling each other glory-days stories of previous launches.
Jacques kept his white-blond head down, pretending to study a technical brief
he had kept folded in one of the pockets of his bunny suit. His modified tool
kit sat at his feet on the metal-grid floor.
He had been
practicing this infiltration for the past two weeks, accustoming himself to the
routine, doing dry runs. His badge and access codes were up-to-date, and with
nearly a thousand technicians working on Atlantis during the frenzy of
launch preparations, he knew he could slip through, so long as he didn't do
anything to draw attention to himself. Security might look tighter, but the
chaos and distractions of such a busy time actually made infiltration easier.
The elevator bumped
to a stop at level 195, the crew entry. As the door opened, Jacques saw three
technicians standing next to the elevator power box. He stiffened, not
expecting anyone there, but he quickly realized they must be waiting for the
astronauts to arrive. As the techs inside the elevator cage shuffled off, one
turned and gave Jacques a thumbs-up, jerking his head toward the topmost levels
of the external tank. "Good luck up there."
"Same to
you," Jacques said stiffly, trying to smother his French accent. People
might remember it.
He relaxed as the
elevator rattled shut again. With a whirring sound, the lift continued up to
the gaseous oxygen vent access arm. He placed his foot against the tool kit,
guarding the ten-kilogram surprise inside.
In many ways this was
much easier than sneaking into the Ariane launch facility. Even though
NASA had more than fourteen thousand contractors working on the shuttle
program, the Americans were so confident they rotated people in and out of the
launch team a thousand at a time—too many faces for the security people to
check personally, forcing them to rely on sophisticated video monitoring
systems and badges.
He smiled at the
thought of silky Yvette and her own part of the task; Yvette should just now be
entering the TV relay bunker, and soon the surveillance cameras would no longer
be a problem.
Clockwork. Mr.
Phillips's plans always went along like clockwork. The clanking elevator slowed
to a stop much higher on the gantry. The metal frame doors creaked open, and
Jacques looked out with an unobstructed view of the Kennedy Space Center from
hundreds of feet above the huge, burn-streaked concrete pad. In the predawn
darkness, the area spangled like a Christmas tree, blazing lights all across
the swamps in chains of light.
Some distance north,
at launchpad 39B, another shuttle stood at another gantry, and even more
distant stood the towering gantries for Titan rockets. "America's
Spaceport," Jacques said to himself. It would never be the same after
today.
Bathed in white glare
from the spotlights, the gaseous oxygen vent access arm was a pathway two
meters wide and extending in front of him to the top of the shuttle's
rust-orange external tank. The spacecraft was already a giant bomb, filled with
explosives. It needed only a small spark to set it off.
Jacques picked up his
tool kit, stepped out onto the walkway, and glanced around, blinking in the
glare. A lone technician worked at the end of the access arm, monitoring the
flow of oxygen topping off the tank. A steel-runged ladder led from the access
arm to a bank of open metal storage bins just below. A video camera monitoring
the tank and the attached equipment watched from the end of the arm, pointing
in the other direction; he saw no other cameras around.
Good. Then they were alone.
Jacques pulled on his
respirator hood, as required to prevent workers from being overcome by fumes.
He zipped it shut, then covered the zipper with a Velcro flap. NASA people were
so concerned about safety. He turned on the oxygen flow and took measured
breaths—timing was critical. Clockwork.
He waved a gloved
hand at the technician at the end of the access arm until he got the man's
attention. His voice sounded muffled inside the loose white hood, keeping his
accent from being noticeable. "Excuse me, could you come here a minute?
I've got a problem."
The tech twisted a
safety valve and strode down the access arm toward Jacques, boots clomping. He
glanced left and right behind his own respirator faceplate to see Jacques's
badge as he approached. "Hey, you don't have access for this level. What
are you doing up here?" The tech frowned.
Jacques motioned
toward the storage bins below, out of range of the stationary video camera.
"A problem came up. I need your help."
"What
problem?" The tech leaned over.
Jacques quickly
wrapped his forearm around the man's hooded neck and jerked as hard as he
could. He heard a muffled snap, and the technician grew slack. "My
mistake, mon ami," Jacques said to himself. "The problem is
taken care of."
Next step.
Two hundred and
twenty-seven feet above the launchpad—the top of the skyscraper—the long truss
of the gaseous oxygen vent arm ended in a "beanie cap" at the tip of
the external tank. Warm gaseous nitrogen was pumped into the beanie cap to
prevent chilled oxygen vapor from condensing ice out of the damp Florida air,
where it might collect on the shuttle and cause damage during launch.
Unrecognizable in his
bunny suit, Jacques lingered at the top of the vent hood, casually bracing
himself against a guardrail. In full view of the diagnostic cameras, he went
through the motions of inspecting for clumps of ice.
Periodically stooping
for better access, Jacques moved out of view of the cameras and reached inside
his tool kit. He withdrew a plastic-cased box containing the explosives and the
RF receiver wired to the detonator. The box had been painted the same rust-red
as the foam on the external tank. He removed the adhesive strips and pressed
the device into the thick insulation of the tank, securing it in place.
The vent arm was the
highest swing arm of three attached to the Fixed Service Structure. One minute
and forty-five seconds before launch, the vent arm would rise from the top of
the rust-red tank and retract.
It would make the
bomb totally inaccessible. And once the explosive detonated, the fuel
reservoirs in the shuttle's external tank and solid rocket boosters would take
care of the rest.
Satisfied that all
was well, Jacques moved back down the access arm to the elevator cage. He
glanced behind him at the storage locker down one level. From this vantage
point, Jacques could barely tell it held a corpse.
The tech's body would
be cremated by the intense heat—either during the launch or the explosion of Atlantis,
whichever came first.
He reached into his
pocket and squeezed a thin transmitter, sending a microsecond-long, encrypted
radio signal to Mr. Phillips. Next step completed.
3
IF THE ADRENALINE RUSH wasn't so thrilling, Nicole Hunter would never have put up
with the hellish chaos of running the Launch Control Center. But she loved
being in total control—like the conductor of an orchestra, not just a musician.
The space shuttle Atlantis
sat on launchpad 39A, three miles away under brilliant spotlights, its
countdown proceeding smoothly. Outside, the low swampland and thick foliage
made the Kennedy Space Center seem quiet and peaceful. Dawn was just about to
break.
But here in the LCC,
Nicole had a hundred problems to take care of, a thousand details to watch, and
a million glitches just waiting to stall the countdown. In other words, a
typical mission—though her first as actual Launch Director. In the public
spotlight.
The secure firing
floor housed a hundred highly trained men and women at seemingly identical
computer stations. Each station had a beige telephone, printer, dual CRT
monitor screens, and a bank of indicator lights.
The place was a
vastly scaled-down version of the old Launch Control Center during the Apollo
moon shots. The reduced number of stations was partly due to superior
technology and computer automation—that was the optimistic story she told the
reporters, her smile emphasized with subtle lipstick. The primary reason for
the shrinkage, though, was due to years of drastic budgetary cuts.
Nicole hated the word
downsizing, but she'd had to learn a whole new language when she'd gone
into management. Even as an astronaut she'd been taught to speak in carefully
phrased sentences when dealing with the media, but upon moving into
administration she'd learned how much more meticulous she had to be just to
survive.
Nicole placed her hands
on her slender hips and self-consciously brushed a strand of gold-brown hair
back into place. Her job had never before demanded that she remain so aware of
her appearance, makeup, hair, wardrobe. She'd had little respect for the NASA
public relations handlers when she was an astronaut, and even less as a Naval
aviator; but she wasn't running through training courses now, or making PR
appearances at schools, or even pressing the flesh at shopping mails during
community service events. The TV cameras were on and she had to look in
control, as well as tend to her real duties on the firing floor.
Now she strode
through the clusters of computer workstations, a general inspecting her troops.
Clad in a white silk blouse and a rayon suit, navy jacket, and snug slacks, she
felt duly presentable for the cameras. Nothing flashy, but professional, a
step up from the hot-dog test pilots and cocky astronauts. She lived in
emotional Whitewater, and she rode it like an expert.
Though compact and
petite, she was not a delicate flower but a dynamo—as she'd had to be to
survive the rigors of astronaut training and to keep up with Iceberg. No one on
the firing floor seemed intimidated by her presence, not that Nicole expected
them to be.
She glanced up at the
glassed-in VIP viewing area half a floor up,
where a dozen or so special visitors and their guests
watched the LCC activities, awaiting the launch. Though it was Nicole's job to
treat each distinguished guest with respect, not all observers were particularly
welcome.
With his back turned
to the frenzied activities and computer checks as if they were irrelevant,
Senator Charles Boorman lectured to the news cameramen he had brought onto the
observation deck, choosing his words carefully to make certain he didn't end up
misquoted. Being too far from the cameras seemed to make him uneasy.
Nicole fumed—normally
it was against NASA policy to bring the media here, but the senator didn't
think rules applied to him. "Surely, you don't have anything to
hide?" he had asked with a tight smile, but with a look that she knew was
dead serious. And so the Launch Control Center had scrambled to make facilities
available to accommodate Boor-man's paparazzi.
Boorman did not
choose to sit outside in the bleachers over at the Banana Creek VIP viewing
site—similar to the facilities where she and Iceberg had watched the disastrous
Ariane launch down in French Guiana—nor did he accept one of the special
roped-off areas on the NASA Causeway that looked east toward the pads. She
suspected that Boorman wanted to schmooze at the LCC, complete with
air-conditioning and hot coffee. He was not a vocal enemy of the space program.
He simply afforded it no interest whatsoever, remaining firmly in the
"let's solve all the problems on Earth before we look to the stars"
camp of pipe dreamers. But his duties had brought him here for the Atlantis launch.
Nicole pulled her
lips tight, watching the man's gaunt face lit like a revivalist preacher's. He
waved his big hands at the end of long arms, and she thought he might be
speaking on the perceived faults of the new treaty before his Senate committee,
which required his recommendation before it could be ratified. Boorman had
often expressed his doubts about continued joint ventures with the Russian
space program, afraid that this treaty could open up a black hole of funding
forever. He was much more interested in keeping the projects in this country,
and in his own state.
The senator offered
his opinions, well aware of the fact that here of all places, on launch day,
his views about the space program were not welcome. But he was getting the
attention, just as he wanted. And Nicole had to be nice ... at least to his
face. She had learned that during her intensive grooming for the Launch
Director's slot.
She turned to the EE
COM station tech and gestured with her chin
toward the observation deck. "So what's the
'distinguished gentleman' talking about now?"
The tech tapped his
earphone, staring distantly at the acoustic tiles in the ceiling as if he had
been listening in all along. "Same old, same old." He reached into a
cubbyhole next to his monitor and pulled out a roll of toilet paper—NASA
Kleenex—and ripped off a wad of sheets to wipe away the dust clinging to his
monitor.
Up in the VIP booth,
the senator turned to look toward Nicole, seeming to stare directly through
her. The TV news cameras followed. Nicole put on a dazzling smile and waved
back at the reporters. She hoped the cameras got that.
The big countdown
clock blinked as each number reeled down. Phones rang repeatedly—stations
reporting in, checklists being verified. Another phone jangled nearby; the
Range Safety technician picked it up, then began punching numbers into her
computer monitor.
"Ms.
Hunter," Ground Control called, holding up a beige phone, "got a
report for you from the video relay bunker."
"I'll take it
here." Nicole went to the nearest station and picked up the phone,
punching in the line.
"Hi, Ms. Hunter.
This is Amos Friese down at the relay bunker, Iceberg's brother."
"Stow that,
Amos. I know who you are!" She laughed in spite of her reluctance to think
about Iceberg. Amos had always been quiet and shy, overwhelmed by the shadow of
his brother. The shy kid had tagged along on enough barbecues and launch team
parties that he should have felt more comfortable talking to her. "What's
your report?"
Amos said in a
nervous voice, "Have you received word from my backup, Cecelia? Cecelia
Hawkins? She was due here before me, but the blockhouse was empty when I got
in. Air-conditioning's turned up, though."
Great, thought
Nicole, groaning inwardly at yet another snafu. Scrub the launch because of a
missing tech. She kept her voice soft and calm, knowing how easily Amos could
get nervous. "What's her criticality code?"
"Uh, she's Level
Two."
Nicole felt relieved.
That meant the person was there as backup for an automated system. "You
saw the launch-day traffic coming in, Amos. She might be stuck in a jam. We've
still got plenty of time in the countdown. Don't sweat it."
"Not to worry,
Ma'am," Amos said, as if gathering courage. "Worst-case scenario, I
can handle this whole setup by myself. You can count on me."
"Thanks for
checking in," Nicole said reassuringly, then hung up the phone and turned
to look for the next item that demanded her attention. She felt uncomfortably
warm in her suit, glad of the LCC air-conditioning. Outside it would be far
worse as the sun rose.
Months, even years,
of preparation had gone into this morning's event. Every launch had its share
of complications and joys, but this flight had been a particular political hot
potato. The Russian Mir space station, the new backbone of the
International Space Station—if it ever got off the ground before they
redesigned it for the fiftieth time—depended on the U.S. space shuttle for
regular resupply missions, and this time nearly half the crew consisted of
Russian nationals. The Belorussian cosmonaut Alexandra Koslovsky, who had
trained at Star City outside Moscow and at the Baikonur Cosmodrome, was
scheduled to perform a space walk in an American Manned Maneuvering Unit.
It was particularly
important that Amos had all his video cameras up and functional with feeds
piped in to the LCC to record every aspect of the launch. It would make great
publicity footage for next year's funding presentations.
Overlapping
conversations became a droning buzz inside the center, growing louder as the
countdown progressed and sequence after sequence was completed: CAPCOM, EGIL,
DPS, INCO, MOD, and a dozen other Scrabble-nightmare acronyms.
"Open loop test
with the Eastern Range checks out."
"Orbital
maneuvering system engines read optimal."
"Conducting gimbal
profile checks, all A-okay."
Nicole felt like a
shuttlecock in a badminton match—but it was her job to answer every detail as
it came up. She was the captain of the ship, and everyone looked to her.
She fingered her gold
necklace, the tiny charm pendant her father had given her—an old-fashioned key.
"The key to the future," he had told her solemnly. "Follow your
dreams, and it'll unlock all the doors you need."
She had followed her
true desires, first resigning her Naval commission, then changing course to go
into Launch Control and the many NASA political duties she found so engaging.
She could have been an average astronaut, or an excellent space program
administrator. She had chosen excellence over mediocrity. Unfortunately, that little gold
key hadn't been enough to unlock Iceberg's mind about her decision—for him, any
career other than being an astronaut was a waste of time.
"Excuse me, Ms.
Hunter," another technician called. "The roadblock vehicles are
prepared and the guards are ready to stop traffic. The Crew Transfer Vehicle is
in front of the Operations and Checkout Building, and the astronauts have
finished suiting up. They're ready to board the CTV for the launchpad."
"Good,"
Nicole said, snapping back to her duties. "Have they made their press
statements yet?"
"Yeah, they read
the cue cards," the technician said. "They've all departed the ready
room. Oh, wait." She touched her earphones. "Lieutenant Commander
Green wants to speak to you before we hand him over to CAPCOM." Johnson
Space Center in Houston, CAPCOM, controlled all communications with the
astronauts once they boarded the shuttle.
"Put him
on." A video feed from one of the private NASA cameras appeared on the
television monitor in front of her. The technician slid her rolling chair aside
to give Nicole room to talk.
"Howdy, Panther," Lieutenant Commander Vick Green said.
His face was a smooth chocolate brown, his eyes large, his cheekbones high,
giving him a look of deep intelligence and a broad good humor.
"Yo,
Gator," she said, bristling a bit. After years of astronaut training,
everyone had gotten so accustomed to their call signs that it seemed second
nature now—except that her old call sign of "Panther" reminded Nicole
too much of the past. "Everything check out? How was breakfast?"
"Steak and eggs,
as usual," Gator said, grinning. "But I feel light as a feather. Wish
you were coming with us. We're having a great time— even without Iceberg. Don't
tell him I said that."
Nicole had gotten
good at masking any change in expression when it came to discussions about
Iceberg. "It was his own hot-dog stunt that pulled him from the
mission."
"That's our
Iceberg," Gator said. "Hey, after we get down, how about we all go
back to the Fat Boy's in Cocoa Beach? Just the three of us. Heck, bring Amos
along, too. I hear they're still having their all-you-can-eat barbecue chicken
special."
"Gator, you're
thinking with your stomach again. I'll pass." She recalled the times their
training group had gone to the old astronaut hangout, a small building with
white siding and a crumbly asphalt parking lot only a few blocks up from the
oceanside strip. Inside, the barbecue joint was lined with dingy, heavily varnished
booths. Folded paper menus carried sticky, greasy fingerprints like badges of
honor, and a smell of smoke and sauce hung in the air like fog in the morning.
Autographed photos of astronauts and test pilots hung on the paneled walls.
Nicole and Iceberg, Gator Green and his latest girlfriend, and others often
hung out to eat ribs and drink pitchers of beer.
Gator shook his head
good-naturedly. "See what happens when you get two stubborn people too
close to each other. I bet Iceberg would come along if I dared him. Maybe you
two could arm wrestle."
Nicole leaned forward
and said quietly, "Shouldn't you be concerned with the mission and not my
personal life, Mister?"
"Sure,
Panther." He seemed momentarily embarrassed. "Did Iceberg show up in
the VIP area for the launch? I'd like to have the crew say good-bye to
him."
Nicole forced a
laugh. "You think Iceberg would show up here with all the reporters? So
they can ask him embarrassing questions and make him look pathetic on TV? For
once I agree with him. He's probably sleeping in, taking the day off."
Gator's eyes widened
in utter disbelief. "Sleeping in? Iceberg? If you say so,
Panther."
"I'm the Launch
Director." Nicole smiled. "People listen when I say things."
"Right,
boss," Gator said. "Too good for us lowly astronaut types. Hey, I'll
have CAPCOM relay a message from the shuttle. The Crew Transfer Vehicle is
ready for boarding."
"Good luck, and
Godspeed, Gator," Nicole said.
She had just enough
time to take a deep breath and collect her thoughts before someone else called.
"Miss Hunter! Excuse me, Miss Hunter." She saw the EE COM station
tech holding his headset and waving at her. "I think you'd better hear
this—you won't believe what the senator's talking about now."
With a lump forming
in her stomach, she grabbed the headphones, snugging them over her ears.
Boorman's nasal yet ponderous voice plodded along as if in an attempt to add
import to every word.
". . . have
chosen to launch a routine investigation into the financial records of every
member of the astronaut corps. To answer your question, though, just because
Colonel Friese is no longer Mission Commander does not excuse him from my
inquiry."
Nicole tore the
headset off, losing her temper and barely managing to put the lid back on it. Smile
for the cameras, she thought. "Excuse me
1 m going up to the
VIP bubble."
"But, Miss
Hunter—the astronauts are loading the CTV!"
Nicole fought to keep
her voice steady as she looked toward Senator Boorman.
You know where to find me. This won't take long."
4
INSIDE THE TV RELAY blockhouse, Amos Friese could sit back in his government surplus
chair and watch the launch from every perspective, thanks to the array of video
cameras. Next best thing to being there!
NASA Select and the commercial TV channels would cull the best footage from Amos's tapes and run it on a twenty-second spot in the evening news—unless they had something more important to show, such as a politician's cat mysteriously acquiring a limp, for instance.
With a wall full of
TV monitors, this was the primo seat in the house. He was such a space buff he
loved to watch it all . . . even though it meant he had to stay inside a clammy
old blockhouse rather than experience the earth-shaking roar directly within
sight of the pad.
He wondered how close
Iceberg had managed to get. Amos thought of his brother, the big shot
astronaut. The former Mission Commander had spent months in training, running
simulators, memorizing control panels and subsystem linkages and backup
computer programs—yet only last month Iceberg had secretly invited his little
brother over just so Amos could hook up Iceberg's new direct broadcast
satellite dish! As a management major at the USAF Academy, Iceberg was great at
memorizing procedures, but someone had to hold his hand to get him past the
technical details. Amos had laughed at his brother's quandary, and Iceberg had
threatened him with dire embarrassments if Amos ever told a soul about it. Not
that he ever would.
Alone in the bunker,
Amos sat back in his old chair. It was comfortable enough, but it squeaked like
a miser's wallet—standard gray government-issue, left over from the Apollo
days, as was this mildewy old blockhouse that connected the launch-control
monitoring systems, the video cameras on the gantry, and those positioned
around the launchpad itself.
His desk was
cluttered with cryptically marked videotapes, a chain of paper clips, an orange
windup space shuttle toy, and a big jar of colorful jawbreakers, one of his
vices. The jawbreakers didn't taste very good, but at least they lasted a long
time.
He gulped from a can
of Jolt Cola, checking his watch. His reflexes needed to be sharp, and he had
to be wide awake. As if sneaking Iceberg inside the restricted area wasn't
enough of an eye-opener! In fact, most of the thrills in Amos's whole life had
to do with ill-advised schemes his big brother talked him into. But he wouldn't
have traded them for anything.
He just wished
Cecelia would show up. He could cover for her without much trouble, as he had
told Launch Director Hunter. The cameras knew what they were supposed to do;
the videocassettes were already recording. He was a relatively useless cog in
the system, though NASA did not waver in its "man in the loop"
philosophy.
But Cecelia had never
been late before, and he was worried about her.
He glanced over at
the other desk, saw her coffee cup, her plastic plants. Thinking about Cecelia
sent a chill up his spine—which embarrassed him a great deal.
Cecelia was
full-figured with black hair, dusky features, generous lips, and the sweetest
voice he'd ever heard. She was a video tech like himself . . . they had so much in
common and they worked so closely together, how could he not like her?
Amos had been terrified Iceberg would figure it out, would tease him
mercilessly about the budding romance or use his bulldozer personality to force
his little brother into proceeding too swiftly. But Iceberg had sensed the
attraction and had been supportive, nothing more—much to Amos's relief.
Sometimes his brother proved that even he had soft spots.
The air conditioner
blasted on, making the refrigerated air inside the bunker even more tomblike.
Amos felt cold to the bone, with an added shiver caused by concern for Cecelia.
He went to the coat rack and pulled on a thick white cable-knit sweater,
letting it hang loose, then went to double-check his video feeds from the
remote cameras.
Down the corridor,
the heavy blockhouse door swung inward on its recently oiled hinges. He jumped,
startled, as Cecelia Hawkins bustled in, looking sheepish and somewhat uneasy.
"Hi, Amos. Sorry I'm late." She feigned a smile.
"I was getting
worried about you!" he said. She was dressed in a magenta-and-green
flowery top with black slacks. The flush to her cheeks only made her more
beautiful.
He had often wondered
what Cecelia might look like with a skirt snug against her ample hips—but Amos
would have to ask her out to see that. NASA policy allowed for no uncovered
legs, no shorts or skirts, because of the danger of injury out in the
processing areas. He still thought she looked nice in slacks, though.
Cecelia shot a
nervous glance over her shoulder. Amos finally noticed two other figures
entering behind her, a man and a woman negotiating a cart through the
equipment-crowded corridor. Both stood tall and muscular, wearing nondescript
Kennedy Space Center jumpsuits. The pale-blond woman was built like a mud
wrestler, and she was a knockout; the word leaped to Amos's mind. His
attention was drawn to her like a magnet, even with Cecelia there.
The exotic woman's
cheekbones were broad and flat, her face so tanned the color looked artificial.
Her short hair was nearly white, matching bleached-pale eyebrows that stood out
like bright blazes on her bronzed forehead. Her eyes were a watery blue, as if
she had stared directly into the sun and had faded the color out of them.
The man accompanying
her had carrot-orange hair and a face so spattered with freckles it seemed as
if the skin coloring had been scrubbed raw. Together, the two of them pushed a
cart laden with video components and diagnostic tools, wires, and extra videotapes,
each carefully labeled with cryptic coding.
"Hey, what's
this, Cecelia?" He nodded to both of them. "Howdy, I'm Amos Friese. A
little late to be running an unscheduled check, isn't it?"
"They're just
here to help out, Amos." Cecelia stepped forward, flicking her dark brown
eyes from side to side and not meeting his gaze. Suddenly he felt very warm in
his thick sweater, despite the air-conditioning.
The two workers
brought the cart into the small central room of the blockhouse. The rusty-haired
man picked up three coded tapes and shuffled them, checking his watch and
selecting one of the black plastic cases.
"Cecelia, we
don't need any assistants," Amos said. "The station is so automated
we could sleep through the launch."
Cecelia lowered her
voice, and a shadow of panic fluttered across her eyes. "Amos, just be
quiet."
Carrot-top chuckled.
Amos blinked, momentarily confused enough to wonder if he should sound an
alarm.
Cecelia gripped his
arm so tightly he could feel each of her fingers even through the sleeve of his
thick sweater. She said in a hushed, awed voice, "They're here from the CIA,
Amos—they've got badges and everything. We have to cooperate with
them."
Amos blinked in
surprise, turning to look at the two strangers. The redhead nodded with a
serious expression that seemed somehow mocking. "You bet. Because of the
international ramifications of this mission, Russian crewmembers and all, we're
here to increase security monitoring, check for encrypted signals. All in our
nation's best interests." "Oui," said the blond woman.
"I thought CIA
people always wore suits and ties," Amos said lamely, not sure what to do,
how to react in this remarkable situation. "That's the FBI,"
Carrot-top answered. "Just relax." "I even called the number
they gave me," Cecelia said.
"They checked out."
The beautiful Amazon
woman selected a narrow metal pipe as long as her forearm. She held it to her
face, studying its two polished ends. "Perhaps this will help you
relax." Her thick French accent sounded like melted chocolate in her
mouth.
She lifted the tube
to her mouth, then blew a sharp puff. Amos instinctively flinched as a bright
red dart shot toward him. He stumbled backward, but the dart struck him in the
chest. He felt a prick through the thick sweater.
"Ow!" He
slapped the red tassel-tailed dart off him. The point where the needle struck
him burned. "What's the big idea?"
His vision became
blurry. Everything smeared with fog . . . losing focus, and he knew he had been
drugged. / always hated shots, he thought. Then his knees melted and
flowed like water beneath him. He slumped to the concrete floor of the
blockhouse.
Yvette watched as Cecelia Hawkins knelt beside her nerdy
co-worker, glaring at her. "Why did you do that?" The fat bitch held
the geek's hand with her pudgy fingers, then stroked his cheek. He breathed
deeply like a kid asleep with a teddy bear. She carefully removed his round
glasses, then stood uncertainly, indignantly. "He wouldn't have caused any
trouble!"
"Just couldn't
take that risk," Rusty said.
Yvette slipped the
blowgun back onto the tray. Humor the bitch for another minute. That's all
we need. "Are all the sensors functioning properly?" she asked,
not bothering to hide her accent anymore. When Cecelia hesitated, Yvette
snapped, "I asked you a question!"
"Uh, yes,
they've been double-checked for the launch." Cecelia said, looking
nervously down at Amos.
Ignoring her, Rusty
stepped up to the control panel and scanned the readouts, knocking Amos's
clipboard aside. He selected one of the videotapes they had brought with them.
"This is a good loop," he said. "Right weather conditions, right
time of day—the sun will be up in minutes."
Yvette leaned over
the controls, looming over Cecelia, who seemed to grow more uncomfortable with
each passing second. "Explain how these systems work."
"It's—uh—it's
all quite simple," Cecelia stammered. "H-how much do you need to
know?"
"Everything."
Cecelia looked longingly down at the
geek's sleeping form, then shuffled in front of the console. Carefully, but
quickly, she led them through the routines, growing more terrified by the
minute. Her skin had a moist, grayish appearance. "Look, maybe I'd better
help Amos."
Rusty interrupted and
pointed to a small color screen, ignoring the plump woman entirely. "It's
all pretty standard—everything's relayed through here. These banks monitor the
motion and sonic sensors, these ones do the video cameras. They've even got
separate banks for the LCC and other stations."
Cecelia forced a
nervous laugh. "Yes, they tell us that a chimpanzee could probably do
it."
Rusty snorted again.
Yvette considered it only one of the many unpleasant sounds he often made.
She picked up the
silvery blowgun and fitted another dart into its end. "I'm afraid we'll
need a bit more privacy, Mademoiselle. My apologies."
Before Cecelia could
move, Yvette touched the blowgun to her lips and with a quick burst of breath,
sent a stinging red needle into the soft flesh of Cecelia's arm.
"What did you do
that for?" Cecelia swatted the dart. "I cooperated—"
Yvette turned away,
disgusted at the bitch's weakness. She gathered her material as she heard Cecelia
take a few stutter steps. "My, God. I can't breathe—"
Yvette didn't turn as
she heard Cecelia crash to the floor.
Less than five
minutes later, Rusty turned from the control systems. "The loop tape's in
place. Motion detectors disabled, sonic sensors off, IR feeds scrambled. We're
ready to rock, if Jacques is finished with his part on the gantry."
"Don't worry. By
now he has the explosives armed," said Yvette with an edge to her voice.
Rusty should have known better than to question Jacques's dependability.
Yvette stood up from
the frame of the blockhouse's blast door that led outside, adjusting the wires
she had installed. She placed the delicate contact sensors on the hinges and
the open gap of the door. "If anybody tries to enter without disabling
these sensors, they'll find an unpleasant surprise."
Rusty indicated the
motionless forms of Amos and Cecelia on the floor. "Think I should put a
bullet through these two in case they wake
up from their nap too soon?" He started to pull
out a pistol from his jumpsuit.
Yvette raised her
white eyebrows, annoyed at him for questioning her actions now. Rusty
forgot who was in charge. "Each of those darts contained enough
tranquilizer to knock out an elephant. Quite a fatal overdose for humans. See
for yourself—the bitch is dead. They will sleep until hell snows over."
"Until hell
freezes over," Rusty corrected.
She said softly, her
words like weapons, "Is there a difference?"
Rusty saw the pure
edge in her gaze. "Definitely not," he said, returning his pistol to
his jumpsuit.
"Let us
go." She glanced at her watch. "Monsieur Phillips is waiting."
They left the
blockhouse as Yvette clipped arming sensors to the wired explosives. Pulling
the blast door shut, they engaged the booby trap.
A white OFFICIAL USE
ONLY sedan drove up with a front-seat passenger already inside. Yvette and her
partner climbed into the back, slamming the doors behind them.
The car roared off to the next stop.
5
LAUNCH CONTROL
CENTER
STORMING TO THE EXIT of the firing floor on level 3, Nicole Hunter slid her badge
through the reader and gained access to the LCC's outer corridor. She ran up to
the mezzanine observation deck and burst in on where Senator Boorman continued
to speak to his cadre of reporters.
His aides and several
other VIP attendees watched their boss's soapboxing with varying expressions.
One aide had brought a copy of the Wall Street Journal and
casually skimmed the listing of stock prices.
"Excuse me,
Senator," Nicole said breathlessly, trying to keep a sweet sound in her
voice. "Could I have a word with you in private?"
Boorman looked
shocked, but he quickly composed himself. He followed Nicole, smiling
pleasantly back at the reporters. "Certainly, Ms. Hunter. Yes,
indeed."
Holding his elbow,
she eased him away from the reporters. When they were alone out in the hall,
she said in an exaggeratedly relieved tone, "I hope I caught you in time
to save you from potential embarrassment. About these investigations—"
He held up one of his
big hands, cutting her off. "I know what you're going to say, Ms. Hunter.
But as a United States senator I have every right to look into the spending
records of the space program, including its personnel. Even astronauts must be
held accountable—if I find any misbehavior."
"I quite agree,
Senator," Nicole said, fighting to keep her tone neutral. In her earlier
days with the astronaut corps, she would have just knocked him to the floor
with a punch in the gut—but here she had to calm herself, use her wits.
Negotiate. "Nevertheless, I believe you were about to gravely misspeak
yourself in front of those reporters. You should reprimand your staff for
providing you with faulty information." She nodded at the senator's aides,
who plainly couldn't hear her.
Boorman's look
hardened. "Faulty information? What are you talking about? My staff isn't
known to make mistakes."
"They should
have told you that the tax and financial records of these crewmembers have
already been investigated and cleared. Any questions raised were dealt with in
follow-up interviews. NASA certainly doesn't want any embarrassing financial
misdeeds either, Senator."
"I wasn't aware
of any such prior investigation."
"It's part of
their security clearances and fitness-for-duty reviews. Full documentation is
easily available from the NASA press office. Any redundant
investigation—especially one without prior evidence of wrongdoing on the
astronauts' part—would merely waste the taxpayers' money, at best . . . or look
like a vindictive witch hunt, at worst." She blinked at him calmly,
helpfully.
Feigning an
interruption, Nicole snatched the pager at her waist and looked at it with a
furrowed brow, though she had not felt it vibrate. It provided a good pretext
to escape from the VIP area, now that she had said her piece. "If you'll excuse me,
Senator, launch day is very busy for all of us. Thank you for your time. If
there's anything else I can do to help, please feel free to let me know."
She walked back into
the VIP observation area, toward one of the phones, covering a half-restrained
sigh. All this politicking gave her a different kind of thrill than the
astronaut training procedures, flying aircraft, pushing her reflexes to the red
edges. More of an intellectual rush. Here, acting as Launch Director, Nicole
had to fight with dialogue instead of controls, using people instead of
subsystems to accomplish what she needed done.
Out of the astronaut
corps for only eight months, Nicole Hunter had become NASA's new golden girl.
After winning her MBA, she had been hustled into important positions, receiving
the "Sally Ride," as one of her colleagues said. Nicole already knew
the procedures, knew the stations, knew the personnel, and knew the astronauts
themselves. After working back at Houston for three launches as CAPCOM, she now
faced the morning as Launch Director for Atlantis.
The sour smell of
coffee simmering too long on the burner caught her attention, and she gestured
to one of the KSC runners. "Make a new pot, would you? When it's done, see
that I get a cup. Two sugars, no cream. I've been up since one A.M. and I need
all the caffeine I can get." The runner nodded eagerly and disappeared.
A large man heaved himself out of his chair
and came over to her as Boorman huddled with his aides, seemingly chewing them
out. Florid-faced and with nondistinctive brown hair cropped into a crew cut,
Ambassador Andrei Trovkin, the cosmonaut liaison from Russia, waved a wide hand
to catch her attention.
Blinking his dark
eyes behind black-rimmed government-issue glasses, Ambassador Trovkin lowered
his voice into a comical stage whisper. "Bravo, Miss Hunter! Even in
Russia we have foolish politicians. I am sure you 'let him have it,' as you
say."
Nicole stood straight and touched her short golden-brown hair,
smoothing it in place just behind her ears. "Why, I never meant to imply
the senator was foolish, Ambassador Trovkin. He's chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, a very important man. It's up to him to decide on the new
treaty for future cooperation in U.S.—Russian space missions."
"He seems to be
'tough customer.' Not friend to space programs of my country or yours."
Nicole looked at him
seriously. "Senator Boorman is a powerful man, but he has never been a
particular threat to us before. Depending on how he votes, he could be a
threat. That's why we have to be nice." Her lips curved in a broad, sweet
smile that almost looked sincere.
"He needs to be
convinced this treaty is best for both of our countries," Trovkin said.
The KSC aide came up
to her with a plastic foam cup of coffee. "Here, Ms. Hunter," he
said. "Found a fresh pot down on the firing floor."
She took a sniff,
thanked him, then sipped the hot liquid. Nothing worked better than coffee to
wash away headaches, and this morning she had already encountered plenty. She
drew a deep breath, then turned back to Trovkin, who grinned broadly at the
NASA Select television monitor, showing a gap between his front teeth.
Garbed in their
orange pressure suits and carrying their helmets, the Atlantis astronauts
filed aboard the camper-van that would take them out to the launchpad.
Traffic inside the Kennedy
Space Center had been cleared along the Crew Transfer Vehicle's path. Imagine
the embarrassment of delaying a countdown because the astronauts got caught in
a traffic jam on their way to the gantry—and with all the spectators hanging
around for every launch, a traffic jam wasn't such a ridiculous possibility.
The Belorussian
cosmonaut, Alexandra Koslovsky, stepped up to the camper-van and glanced
directly into the camera. Her strawberry blond hair hung behind her in a neat
braid. She wore sunglasses, which she would no doubt leave in the van before
the team climbed out onto the gantry elevator that would take them up to the
shuttle's crew access hatch.
"Ah, look at
her," Trovkin said, his dark eyes fixed on the image, the lenses of his glasses
glinting in the fluorescent lights. "See the sinuous way she moves? The
strength of her character? She is magnificent!"
Nicole glanced at the
ambassador. "Yes, she is beautiful."
"That much is
obvious, my friend," Trovkin said, his eyes sparkling. "Wait until
she walks in space. Then you will see true grace."
Nicole had heard
rumors of the two of them; Trovkin and Koslovsky didn't keep their relationship
terribly secret. The pair had much in common. Trovkin himself had gone through
cosmonaut training but had been forced to step out of the program due to a
heart murmur. He seemed not to resent the fact that Alexandra would spacewalk
from the American shuttle. Instead, he seemed enthusiastic about the
opportunity she had.
When the astronauts
had boarded the van and the news cameras backed off to watch the CTV lumber into motion, Trovkin
finally managed to tear his attention away. Nicole studied the man, broad
shouldered, square jawed. A stereotypical hero type, she thought.
"So, Launch
Director Hunter," Trovkin said, "has your friend Colonel Friese come
to observe launch? This was to have been his mission."
"I'm afraid not,
Ambassador Trovkin," she said simply.
"A pity,"
he said. "I had looked forward to meeting famous ‘Ice-berg.' "
"Yeah,
well," Nicole said, looking away and fumbling for some excuse. "I
think he had other training to do. With his qualifications, he's naturally
expected to be assigned to a different crew and—"
Trovkin chuckled.
"Of course I understand. I would never have wanted to be on display,
poignant reminder of how fragile we all are, hobbling about with foot in cast.
He is more Russian than American— unflappable."
"Oh, is that
what he is?" Nicole said, raising her eyebrows. "I suppose
unflappable is as good a word as any . . . but I must get back to my duties,
Ambassador. Please enjoy the launch."
"I intend to, my
friend."
Carrying her coffee
carefully to keep from sloshing on her white silk blouse, Nicole started to
leave the VIP observation deck, when the reporter from channel 7 caught her
arm. "Could I get a statement, Ms. Hunter?"
"Sure."
As she waited for the
cameras to come on, she understood fully why Iceberg didn't want to be here for
the launch, for all the reasons Gator Green and Andrei Trovkin had stated—but
also the big show-off probably felt intimidated to be with his old flame in a
place where she was clearly in command.
Though they had their
differences, they'd also had marvelously strong ties to each other, and now
Nicole felt true disappointment for him. Iceberg had lost his chance to command
the mission because of his crazy stunt for the cameras.
Supposedly in
quarantine, taking care of himself, making sure he didn't get exposed to any
cold virus—Iceberg had been jogging along the beach to the hoots and catcalls
of reporters from a local television station. Iceberg had then proceeded to do
the quick, resilient backflip that had become his trademark performance.
Iceberg had competed as an all-American gymnast in college; he had done the
trick hundreds of times— but here, in front of the cameras, his own damned
showboating had done him in. He had landed wrong and broken his left foot.
And now, on launch day, replacement commander Dr. Marc Franklin
sat in the Atlantic's left-hand command seat.
Nicole didn't dare
express how sorry she was. Iceberg's ego was already as big as a refrigerator,
and it might serve him good to be taken down a notch. If Iceberg couldn't sit
at the head of the table, he didn't want to come to breakfast. That was just
his character.
But today, while he
could sleep in and ignore the countdown chaos, Nicole had a thousand important
duties to attend to. As the light above the TV camera winked red, the phones in
the main firing floor continued ringing. The numbers on the countdown clock
decreased steadily.
Step by step, the
shuttle prepared for launch.
6
TWO MILES FROM
LAUNCHPAD 39A
E AND E: ESCAPE and Evasion. At daybreak. Iceberg used the techniques he had
learned at the Air Force Academy nearly twenty years ago. Enjoying the
challenge, he worked his way from Salvatore's guard shack deeper into the
restricted area, to where he could watch the launch undetected.
He crouched low and avoided the open paths, keeping an eye out for the multiple motion, sonic, and video sensors hidden in the underbrush.
He knew where the
devices were, how to find them, and—he hoped— how to avoid setting them off. He
just had to keep cool, nerves of ice, frosty control.
Iceberg thought about
a course called SERE he'd taken at the Academy—Survival, Escape, Resistance,
and Evasion. The E and E part had been a major component during the Cold War,
and even when peace broke out, knowing how to evade the enemy had saved pilots
like Captain Scott O'Grady when he had been shot down over Bosnia.
As he E and E'ed
across the swampy turf, Iceberg found himself having fun keeping out of sight
from the distant roving NASA patrols, even with his broken foot. He hoped the
cast would hold up in its protective moon boot covering. It would really be a
bitch if sand got inside the cast where he couldn't scratch.
Iceberg crept onto a
small rise and spotted the shuttle, perfectly visible in the spotlights and the
competing dawn light. This would be a good place to establish his base. Endeavour,
ready for its own launch within the next month, stood on the other pad
farther in the distance. He flopped down, out of sight from the launchpad and,
more importantly, out of view from the LCC building and the rest of Kennedy
Space Center operations.
His foot throbbed
like crazy, but he had managed to keep the cast dry. He rubbed the skin around
the cast just below his knee, annoyed at the deep-seated itch within his bones
that he couldn't reach. With a sigh, he distracted himself by concentrating on
the activity around him.
NASA security
helicopters flew low over the brush-covered ground as they searched for anyone
attempting an illegal entry—such as Iceberg. But now that the sun had splashed
over the horizon and added the warmth of dawn to the swampland, the aircraft
had to rely more on sight and less on the sensitive infrared detectors to
detect any people below them.
Effective launch-day
sweeps were nearly an impossible task, more difficult than the Coast Guard
searching for a person bobbing in the ocean, because in the ocean people didn't
have bushes, sand dunes, hollows, and trees to hide them. Iceberg had ridden in
the NASA security helicopters once during astronaut training as they had
skimmed over the site, searching for imaginary terrorists. They hadn't found
any, of course, but he still remembered the thrill of zipping above the sparse
vegetation, popping up over a small rise, and startling an alligator crawling
through the swamp toward the wide, sluggish Banana River.
Iceberg looked over
his shoulder as he settled into his private little viewing area. From here, if
he stood above the vegetation level, he could still barely make out the guard
shack, though he had taken a circuitous route across what must have been two
miles of swamp.
He glanced at his
watch. The shuttle crew would have ridden the Crew Transfer Vehicle out to the
pad by now. His crew.
One morning, more
than a month before the scheduled launch date, Iceberg had used his clearance
and his badge to enter the Orbiter Processing Facility, where Atlantis was
being outfitted for the mission. In the hangar-like building, teams of workers
combed the giant orbiter, testing every minuscule system, every connection,
every stress point.
The doors yawned open
in the back; the shuttle was so tall that a separate notch had been cut above
the doors to allow the tail fin to slip through. Sunlight spilled in from
outside, brighter than the garish naked bulbs shining from catwalks far above.
Jump-suited workers passed back and forth, carrying clipboards, comparing
checklists.
Iceberg had stood
under Atlantis, admiring the craft, watching technicians test every one
of the specially shaped ceramic heat tiles on the bottom of the hull, replacing
those in need of repair, approving the undamaged pieces. They installed gap
fillers between the tiles, designed to keep the searing heat from reaching the
aluminum hull. He had walked around silently staring, watching, feeling like a
kid in a toy store. One of the shift supervisors asked if he needed anything,
but Iceberg waved him away, wanting only to look at the craft, to "kick
the tires" before launch.
He had been so
confident then.
After Iceberg's
injury, NASA had put that straitlaced idiot Marc Franklin in as commander.
Besides being a civilian, Franklin didn't have the right stuff to be a shuttle
commander. Sure, the guy had flown a couple of missions before, and he'd actually
done a pretty good EVA on that last flight when they hauled in the Wake Shield.
But there was one hell of a difference between following orders as part of a
crew and running the whole shooting match. It was a matter of mind-set. Why
else did the military spend so much time grooming its people for the particular
demands of command?
Iceberg tried to push
the sour thoughts out of his mind as he settled in. No changing it now. He had
broken his own foot, and he couldn't blame anyone else for that. His people
knew their stuff. They could pull off the mission, even with Franklin as
commander.
He opened his pack
and dug out a bottle of buffered aspirin, double strength. He debated for a
second, then dry-swallowed three tablets to cut the pain in his foot. He didn't want to be
bothered in case he had to hightail it back to Salvatore's shack in a hurry.
Iceberg pulled out
his binoculars and a TV Walkman. Leaning back, he extended the antenna and
tuned to the launch coverage from channel 7. He saw a picture of Atlantis sitting
on the pad, a feed from Amos's TV relay bunker. On television, though, the
shuttle looked brighter, with a high scudding of clouds above. Iceberg glanced
up—the sky was absolutely clear. He frowned. That's funny, he thought.
Were the TV cameras picking up something he couldn't see, or was he getting a
ghost reflection on the screen?
Iceberg tried to get
better reception. The talking head from channel 7 came on and explained that
the launch was in the middle of a built-in hold. He lay prone, setting the
miniature TV to the side as he got out the binoculars. He surveyed the area.
Ants marched along the sand, upset at his presence. With a sharp gust of
breath, he blew them away from his face, then focused the binoculars.
Technicians in white
bunny suits moved around the launch structure. Nearly a mile in front of him
sat the nearest M-113 Armored Personnel Carrier, ready to roar into action at
the launchpad if called. The seven safety lines—the emergency exit system—fanned
out from the 195-foot level of the Fixed Service Structure to a safety bunker
twelve hundred feet away.
Iceberg was situated
perpendicular to the flame trench, part of the flame deflector system that
bisected the hardened launchpad. The trench divided the pad lengthwise, five
hundred feet long, sixty wide, forty deep. Nearby, a water tower stood ready to
dump its contents down onto the pad in the first seconds of launch for cooling
and noise suppression. During ignition, flames from the shuttle's main engines
and solid rocket boosters blasted down the trench and out the sides. The deadly
orange cloud from the solid rocket booster's fuel would drift harmlessly out to
sea.
But Iceberg figured
his position was safe enough.
On the launchpad the
final checkout crew was making their last rounds. By now the countdown should
be within T minus twenty minutes.
Iceberg rolled over
on the rise and adjusted the volume on the Walk-man. Nicole Hunter's smiling,
professional face took up most of the small TV screen. The words LAUNCH
DIRECTOR were set at the bottom of the screen, but instead of Nicole's voice,
the reporter from channel 7 gushed over the audio. "So do you think your
past training as an astronaut gives you more credibility with the crew when you
have to make tough calls?"
"Tough calls?
Give me a break," Iceberg snorted at the TV. "She has a checklist,
doesn't she?"
"Absolutely," said Nicole. "I even have a checklist. And
the astronauts know they have one of their own calling the shots. Since I've
been out there on the pad myself, I know what thoughts are rolling through
their minds right now."
"Yeah,"
Iceberg muttered. He turned away from the small TV set and looked through his
binoculars at the launchpad. "I bet my crew's thinking 'Let's cut the PR
bullshit and light this friggin' candle.' "
Iceberg studied the
shuttle as Nicole's interview continued. Her voice brought back the memory of
her being on the training team with them, and the fun they'd had with so many
things in common, when she was part of operations, not management and fluff.
He supposed the world
needed those kinds of people—the maintenance crews, the launch infrastructure,
even the PR flacks and lobbyists that ran interference before Congress. But
Nicole had been an astronaut, one of the chosen few who had actually
slipped the earthly bonds and— as corny as it sounded—touched the face of God.
Then she gave it up.
Nicole claimed she
had to look at her long-term career goals. It sounded like a line from some
self-help tape she had listened to. Now, though, she was sitting in the
limelight, along with Franklin, Gator, and the rest of his crew.
And here he was,
hiding in the dirt, swatting mosquitoes.
For now he'd just sit
back and relax, let the others enjoy the thrills while he laid low and kept out
of sight. He'd always wondered what the tourists felt like at a launch.
7
SWAMPS,
NORTH BANANA
RIVER
AIR BUBBLES CHURNED THE surface of the still, tepid water. Biting flies buzzed
angrily up from floating weeds at the surface. The half-submerged heads of two
alligators cut through the water like dark boats as they swam away from the
bubbles, grunting. The alligator-infested water served as a natural barrier to
stop curious onlookers from approaching the restricted Launch Complex. Unless
the intruders were prepared. A dark blue trail of dye extended from the
bubbles, diffusing into the water, barely visible as the low sun filtered through the
trees. The alligators avoided the foul-smelling repellent, crawling onto the
soggy shore to get away. A fat bull alligator opened his mouth in frustration
but made no attempt to reenter the water.
The small tributary
ran inland and stopped between the shuttle launchpads and the massive Vehicle
Assembly Building. To the north, Atlantis stood prepared on its gantry,
lit by morning light.
The bubbles in the
water grew more intense, and two masked faces broke the surface at the same
time. The men wore black wetsuits and scuba gear, the dark blue repellent
foaming around them. Once on land, they would have to watch out for snakes and
wild boars. Surmountable problems.
The frogmen swam
silently toward shore, scanning for NASA helicopters above. But the dawn had
driven the aircraft high, spotting for obvious intruders.
The two men stood in
the shallow water, their flippers sinking into the muck. Behind them they
dragged a black waterproof satchel that looked like a body bag, heavy with
weapons. The first man dropped the air hose from his mouth and raised his face
mask. His scraggly beard dripped water as he sniffed the sour-smelling air.
"Ah, sightseeing in the swamps—eh, Cueball?"
The second, larger
man raised his mask as well but did not speak. His ebony head was smooth and
hairless as a black billiard ball. He looked quizzically at Mory, the first
man, and made a hand signal.
Mory sniffed again,
scowling at the stench of rotted vegetation, searching for a hidden human
presence—gas fumes from patrolling Jeeps, rifle oil from foot patrols, human
body odor.
Looking behind him,
Mory saw that their alligator repellent had quickly diffused through the water.
Good—it certainly stank. After being let off from a private, hidden yacht six
hours earlier, they had timed their arrival on shore perfectly. Any sooner, and
the IR sensors on board the NASA helicopters could have detected them; any
later, and the blue dye would have been clearly visible in the sunlight.
Mory spotted a small
depression under a tangled canopy of creeper-covered mangroves, framed by
palmettos. There they could remain hidden from the Vehicle Assembly Building
and the launchpad. Perfect. A little camouflage and they would be completely
invisible as they set up. They quickly removed their flippers and hung them
from their belts.
Mory tugged on the
floating satchel, gesturing toward the depression with his other hand. "We'll hide the
equipment there." Cueball nodded and picked up the rear of the bag. Their
feet made squishing sounds in the muck as they climbed onto shore and into
hiding.
Mory sniffed the air
and turned just as another alligator slipped into the water with a surprisingly
graceful splash. He smoothed the weeds and soft ground around the equipment bag
so that he could open it on a flat surface. His hand struck hard, thin metal
embedded in the ground.
"Lookee
here." He dropped to his knees and started digging carefully around the
device. Scooping sand from around the metallic pipe, he uncovered a thin whip
antenna and several sophisticated sensors ending in a bulbous cavity that held
a battery.
Cueball's eyes
widened. The hairless man pounded his fist to get Mory's attention and used
sign language.
Mory grinned.
"You're right. It's a sonic sensor—probably has a motion component as
well. But it's not doing our NASA friends much good now, is it?"
Cueball glanced at
his watch; then a slow grin spread across his face. He pantomimed someone being
hit by a blow dart.
Mory tossed the
deactivated sensor to the side. "Come on, we've got a timetable to follow.
Keep your eyes open and your weapon ready in case we have to take out one of
NASA's roving patrols, though I'd prefer to save the excitement for
later."
Cueball struggled to
remove his wetsuit. The bald man's chest rippled with muscles, his massive arms
as thick as Mory's legs.
Under the wetsuits
the men wore swimming trunks. Mory broke the watertight seal on the equipment
bag and pulled out mottled, sand-colored camouflage and a pair of boots. He
tossed Cueball the larger set of camouflage and footgear. In moments the two
had transformed themselves from scuba divers to camouflaged militia.
Mory unzipped the
heavy equipment bag the rest of the way, peeling back two different waterproof
layers to pull out the weaponry. Cueball bent to help him, unfolding a pair of
7.62-mm Valmet M78 long-barrel automatic rifles with scopes, armor-piercing
shells, a pair of FAMAS G2 assault rifles, high-power binoculars, two radios,
backpacks, a shoulder-mounted Stinger missile launcher, and six small missiles.
"Enough for a real party," Mory said.
He brushed back
wetness from his scraggly beard, then crouched at the top of the rise, pressing
binoculars against his face. He caught a faint whiff of helicopter fuel, oily
exhaust—but the fumes were stale by now, no threat. He slapped at a mosquito that landed on his
face. Damn bugs.
At least they were
better than the alligators.
He felt a tap on his
shoulder. Cueball had buried the scuba gear inside the equipment bag, but left
their weapons exposed and available. He snatched a few broken branches from a
nearby deadfall to cover the disturbed sand.
"Good,"
Mory said. "Let's start hiking. Half a mile straight ahead will put us
well within range. I don't want to risk shooting from this far out."
Cueball nodded, then turned to pick up his share of the weaponry— which was far
more than half. Each man hung an assault rifle over his shoulder while carrying
a sniper's rifle. He grabbed the shoulder-mounted missile launcher as Mory
pulled on a sleek backpack.
Crouching and loaded
down, Mory led the way, weaving around small clumps of vegetation and sand,
keeping as low as possible. His boots crunched on the underbrush and slurped in
the muck. Behind him Cue-ball looked around like a machine programmed to
perform a search-and-destroy mission.
They made the
distance in little more than twenty minutes. Atlantis loomed on its
launchpad like a sacrificial lamb; Mory caught glimpses of the Armored
Personnel Carrier nearest the gantry. Good. They'd be able to cover Jacques
from here as well.
Mory stopped and
shrugged off his pack. The nearest road was a quarter mile away, so they'd be
invisible from an unexpected vehicle patrol. He motioned for Cueball to set up
post. The silent man reconnoitered the area and positioned himself where he had
a view of both the shuttle complex and the Vehicle Assembly Building. No one
would be able to get in or out without being seen.
Mory joined his companion,
then glanced at his watch. It was not yet six o'clock, and they had minutes to
spare. He found himself breathing hard, and sweat rolled down his face, more
from the damned humidity than the physical exertion. He used his camouflaged
sleeve to brush away the perspiration, then fumbled in his back for a portable
beeper.
Cueball remained
vigilant, inspecting the territory they had taken. Mory punched in the Skypage
number and entered a code in the small transmitter. Mr. Phillips needed to be
kept apprised of their progress.
Satisfied that the
message had been sent, Mory settled back to wait for the show.
8
NAVY LIEUTENANT COMMANDER "GATOR" Green stepped out of the NASA camper-van
that served as the Crew Transfer Vehicle at the base of Atlantis. He
felt his heartbeat increase.
This was even better than running onto a lighted football field. This was it—two hours before launch and no more practicing. No more of the endless NASA drills to get him as comfortable as possible with his first real flight as pilot of the shuttle. He just wished Iceberg were here.
His bird stood on the
pad, beautiful and white, blessed by thousands of engineers. Named for the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute's research ship in service from 1930 to
1966, OV-104, Atlantis towered 184 feet from the bottoms of its two
solid rocket boosters to the top of the rust-red external tank. White fumes of
liquid oxygen and hydrogen vented from their tanks.
Technicians stopped
their work and applauded as Gator and his fellow astronauts stepped from the
Crew Transfer Vehicle. NASA television cameras and flashbulbs lined the
walkway; Gator paused as a dozen hands reached out to pat him on his back. He'd
come a long way from when he was a boy growing up in the Atlanta ghetto.
Luckily, the Navy had been open to an ambitious, good-humored black kid with
excellent grades . . . and a kid who kept trying and trying until someone said
yes.
A Russian voice spoke
behind him, deep but very female. "Are you stopping for portrait painting, Lieutenant
Commander Gator? You are holding up the rest
of us."
Gator joked,
"Not at all, Comrade. After you." He knew the Russians were sensitive
about using the outdated communist title.
Cosmonaut Alexandra
Koslovsky stepped past him, grinning. Since the orange pressure suit hid her
lithe features, she did not look like so much of an athlete, but Alexandra was
one of the stars of this flight, scheduled to perform the first U.S.—Russian
tandem space walk.
"I didn't expect so many gawkers," said Gator.
"They must have shown up to see our Russian friends."
"Then maybe I
should stop for portrait instead of you," Alexandra said over her
shoulder.
Gator laughed and
turned back to the cordon of applauding NASA and contractor personnel. Now,
this is the way it should always be, he thought. He started toward the
elevator that would take the crew up the gantry to the White Room, where they
would board the shuttle.
He shook hands with
more well-wishers, technicians from KSC's operations contractor, NASA
contractors, even a few high-level managers distinguished from the rest by the
ties beneath their work overalls. The seven astronauts crammed into the
elevator, grateful for the relative silence.
"I prefer this
sendoff to what Belorus gave us," Alexandra said. "Our press does not
get as excited as yours."
"The difference
is our press never even knows of launch," said Orlov, one of Alexandra's
fellow cosmonauts. Gator and the other Americans chuckled politely. Only recently had the
Russian press even been allowed to attend space launches.
The elevator began
its rattling climb. Gator said, "It may not seem like a big deal to you
Eastern Europeans, but our press loves 'firsts'— like last year's resupply
mission to Mir, or this joint U.S.-Russian space walk. We made such a
big deal over Sally Ride, our first female astronaut, although your first
female cosmonaut, Valentina Tereshkova, upstaged her by two decades."
Dr. Marc Franklin,
the replacement mission commander, interjected, "You should have seen the
sendoff they gave the guys back in the Apollo years, when we won the moon
race."
Open mouth, insert
foot, thought Gator. Having to get used to a new shuttle commander in the
past week and a half had been difficult for the crew. It didn't help that
Franklin came off as an inflexible, humorless horse's ass. Franklin's
intentions were right on, and the man had a reputation for being a solid
worker. But he was certainly not a leader.
Orlov appeared
offended by Franklin's comment, but Alexandra took it with grace, leaning over
to stage-whisper into Gator's ear. "Dr. Franklin has not been given vodka
and caviar initiation. We can hold nothing against him."
Gator covered a
snicker. Back at one of their outings during the first months of training with
the cosmonaut crew, Alexandra had reverently brought in a gift she'd carried in
her personal possessions, a small jar of Beluga caviar and an oily gray-green
bottle of state-produced vodka from one of the distilleries in her home city of
Minsk. Alexandra had stored the vodka in the freezer, then carefully spread the
caviar like tiny black pearls on crackers, adding chopped white onion. She
passed the crackers out to the crew members like a priest distributing the
host.
Gator had looked
strangely at the stuff, sniffing. "If it weren't for the onions, it would
smell just like fish eggs. Now at least it smells like fish eggs and raw onions
together."
Alexandra nodded, then
ate her cracker with obvious delight, as did the other two Russian mission
specialists. The two American specialists, Major Arlan Burns and Frank Purvis,
were not so enthusiastic. Frank Purvis ate his delicately, making polite
comments, and Arlan Burns gulped his in one bite, as if taking medicine.
Gator had looked at
Iceberg, both waiting for the other to pop the caviar in his mouth. With
unspoken assent, they bit simultaneously. Luckily, Alexandra's shots of vodka
scalded away the taste while bringing tears
to Gator's eyes. He was very glad when they switched
back to drinking beer. . .
"I watched news
conference before getting in Crew Transfer Vehicle. Your Senator Boorman,"
Alexandra said into the brief, awkward silence. "I am surprised at lack of
support a political figure gives space program in public, especially while at
launch center. What do financial records have to do with astronaut
accomplishments?"
Gator made a
raspberry sound. "Haven't you heard that astronauts are all private
millionaires?"
"In Russia
politicians understand importance of space flight, and public's need for
heroes," said Alexandra. "Even with end of Cold War and fragmentation
of Soviet Union, we have cooperation among independent nations for our space program."
Gator said,
"Unfortunately in our society, a lot of Neanderthals go into
politics."
"Then our
countries are actually not so different," Orlov laughed. The elevator
bumped to a stop at level 195 and the White Room chamber. Franklin pretended he
had never made his clumsy comment, or perhaps did not even notice. "Okay,
kids—leave the politics back on Earth. It's time to rock and roll. We've got a
mission to accomplish."
White jump-suited
technicians lined the orbiter access arm that led to the White Room connected
to the shuttle. The five-foot-wide, sixty-five-foot-long access arm looked like
a gladiator tunnel. The last few techs applauded as Gator strolled toward the
shuttle. Yep, I could get used to this real fast, he thought. And
everybody said I had a big ego when I was just a Navy football player.
He reached the
circular hatch on the orbiter's left side, which led directly to the mid-level
of the craft. A tech stood on either side to assist him; another waited just
inside the shuttle. "Good luck, Lieutenant Commander," said one of
the techs as she held out a hand to help him through the access way. "My
daughter wants to be an astronaut, just like you."
Gator shook the
woman's hand and saw a lot of his mother in her eyes. His mother had pushed him
never to accept the mediocre. "Make sure your daughter goes to Annapolis,
then," Gator said, "and not any of those other two dinky schools that
try and pass for military academies."
"I heard that,
Gator! Don't lead that young lady astray." Major Arlan Burns was the
crew's sole remaining Air Force officer—now that Iceberg had been pulled from
the mission.
Gator waved the
comment aside with a laugh. Stooping down, he climbed into the shuttle, using the mid-deck
wall as the floor. He walked in a low crouch, stepping over hand and foot
grips, and made his way to the flight deck. There the pilot's seat was on the
far right, its back to the floor.
The front section of
the flight deck was covered with lighted panels, old screen displays, and
switches masked by metal guards—technology straight from the seventies, but it worked,
virtually guaranteed not to fail. Gator stepped over the mission
specialist's chair and climbed into his seat on his back in a sitting position.
Commander Franklin
followed, and they both strapped into their seats up front. Gator scanned the
console, concentrating on focusing his mind on the mission. Just like the
simulator. He glanced at the panels—front, left side, next to the commander, center,
right, next to the pilot overhead— and at the upgraded flatscreens. All there,
no surprises.
They had another few
minutes before it was time to remove the Velcro-backed cue cards from the
flight-deck file and attach them to the instrument panel. He put on his headset
and plugged into the console. This would be the last time in the two-week
mission he had a moment to himself to collect his thoughts.
So here he was,
Annapolis's smallest football player on top of the biggest Roman candle in the
country. He glanced over at Franklin. The new commander looked over his
shoulder at the white-suited techs helping the astronauts climb aboard.
Alexandra strapped in directly behind him in the mission specialist's seat; her
Russian comrades were on the mid-deck with Burns and Walker, out of sight.
Franklin allowed everyone to spin up their stations by themselves.
Even with the
well-rehearsed routine, Gator still thought it would be comforting to have
Iceberg's cool hand guiding them. He started to wonder about his friend, but
Franklin's voice came over the intercom. "Voice check, kids. On my
count."
Gator turned his
attention back to the flight. A little more than one hour to go. From here on
out it was by the book, no surprises.
9
GUARD FENCE-RESTRICTED AREA
AS THE COMMANDEERED NASA car drove away from the video-relay blockhouse, Mr.
Phillips lounged in the front passenger seat, studying his handheld personal
data assistant. He adjusted the brightness on the small liquid crystal screen
and squinted at the list displayed by the computer. Things to Do Today.
Using a blunt stylus
to scroll through the data file that detailed every point in the shuttle
countdown sequence, he ticked off the events that had already occurred. He rubbed
one finger along his clean-shaven upper lip and studied the parallel timeline
for his team, marking each activity his people had completed and the tasks in
which they were presently engaged.
He cleared his pager
of the message that had appeared just moments before: PACKAGE PLANTED—JACQUES.
"Good." He used the stylus to check that item off on the
touch-sensitive screen.
As Duncan drove the
car north along the narrow grass-lined road, puffing on a menthol cigarette,
Mr. Phillips fumbled in his front pocket and withdrew the pocket watch. He
looked up from the watch and the open PDA to note their location and allowed
himself a warm, satisfied smile. "Precisely on time." He twisted in
his seat to see Yvette and Rusty sitting in the back, both flushed with
excitement. "Success comes through careful planning," he said to
them. "And we have been careful indeed."
"You always are,
Mr. Phillips," Rusty said.
Duncan tossed long
gray-brown hair out of his eyes and glanced away from the road toward the
passenger seat. "We're about half a mile from the guard shack, Mr.
Phillips," he said in his cheery Australian accent, tossing the cigarette
butt out the window.
"All right, pull
over to the side of the road, please. Yvette, my dear, would you care to drive?
We'll need your expertise in a few moments."
"Oui, Monsieur
Phillips," she said.
Duncan pulled off
onto the flat damp grass beside the road, leaving fresh tire tracks among
others already pressed into the soft sandy ground. Shifting the government car
into park, he opened the squeaking door and climbed out, holding it open for
the pale-blond Amazon.
Mr. Phillips scanned
the area as Duncan and Yvette exchanged places. The road was deserted. The NASA
vehicle had allowed them to gain access to the eastern security road, which
they had driven up from Cape Canaveral earlier that morning. The terrain lacked
the rugged, rocky features Mr. Phillips had known growing up near the New
England coast; here in the lowlands they were sure to be spotted if they acted
out of place.
Yvette slipped behind
the wheel and slid the seat back as far as it would go. She adjusted the
mirror, then clicked the left turn signal before pulling back onto the deserted
road. She drove the white government sedan at precisely the posted speed limit,
never straying over the divider line.
Mr. Phillips turned
back to the PDA and pointed the stylus to the other items on the list.
"Rusty," he said, "you're sure all the motion sensors are disabled? The
video loops playing in the TV bunker are a perfect substitute?"
"Definitely,
Mister Phillips," Rusty said. "I picked a video to match the weather
and time conditions for this launch. NASA will keep watching their screens, but
they'll be seeing last year's launch. Sooner or later somebody's going to
notice the difference—but they'll be snowed long enough."
Mr. Phillips checked
that item off as complete, then straightened the gold-and-white cloisonne space
shuttle pin at his lapel. The pager in his pocket went off, and he pulled it
out to scan the brief message on its tiny screen. "READY—MORY."
"Ah," he
said with a smile, "our aquatic friends are in position. Good." He
used the charcoal-gray stylus to check off the next item on the list, then clicked
shut the lid on the handheld PDA. "Only two more steps in phase one.
Everything is proceeding with remarkable efficiency."
"Approaching the
gate, Monsieur Phillips," Yvette said, slowing down.
"Onward and
upward," he said. "Just like a bull market." From the backseat,
Duncan said, "After today we won't need to do any more working for the
rest of our lives, mates."
Mr. Phillips frowned
and turned to him. "Let's not get ahead of ourselves, Duncan."
Not much larger than
a telephone booth, the guard shack stood alone by the road. Bright red letters
on a white signboard admonished, "Warning, Restricted Area."
An older, mustached
man sat outside the shack in a colorful folding lawn chair, the kind one could
buy for a few dollars at a discount department store. Seeing their white NASA
car approach, the guard stood to wait for them. From the casual way he moved
and the friendly expression on his face, it was apparent that he expected no
trouble. They were probably the hundredth car to pass through in the last few
hours. This old man would pose no problem at all.
Yvette brought the
car to a gentle stop as the guard came around toward the driver's side window.
She carefully turned the crank to lower the glass, then shifted the car into
park so she could use both of her hands.
"Excuse me, my
good man," Mr. Phillips said, leaning close to Yvette, "isn't this
the way to the rocket?"
Yvette whispered,
"Monsieur Phillips, I will need room—if you could lean back?" He pressed
himself against the passenger door, out of the way.
"Sorry,
folks," the guard said with a Hispanic accent as he stooped to Yvette's
window. He was swarthy and potbellied. "This area is restricted for the
launch. Everybody's been cleared beyond this point. The last van hauling the
remaining workers from the launchpad is due out here any minute. You'll have to
drive back to the causeway and park your car there to watch the launch, or you
can drive around to the Banana Creek VIP viewing site." He frowned.
"Could I see your passes, please?"
"No, I'm afraid
not," Mr. Phillips said quietly.
The guard raised his
eyebrows. "Excuse me?" He leaned into the car, unable to believe what
Mr. Phillips had said.
Yvette struck in one
fluid motion. She whipped her left arm over the old guard's neck. The man
struggled. He gasped as Yvette tightened her grip. Pulling his head sharply
down, she viciously twisted his head and slammed him down against the door
again, crushing his larynx. A loud snapping sound reverberated throughout the
car, and the guard fell slack, his eyes bugging out in astonishment, rapidly
growing dull with death.
"Something
caught in your throat?" Mr. Phillips said. He reached over, planted his
hand on the guard's head, and shoved, toppling the old man away from the
driver's door to prevent messy stains on his suit.
Mr. Phillips found it
amazing that Yvette could move so well in such a cramped space. Exhilarating!
She was so professional, and so entertaining. The only other person remotely
comparable was her dear lover, Jacques.
Duncan scrambled out
of the car as Rusty holstered the silenced pistol he had taken out, just in
case Yvette ran into difficulty. Yvette remained behind the wheel while the
others did their duties; she had already done hers.
Mr. Phillips waited
primly beside her. "Pop the trunk for them, Yvette," he said.
Duncan came around
and bent over, gripping the fallen guard under the armpits. He relieved the old
man of his side arm, then dragged him through the thick grass into a bog of
weeds and underbrush behind the shack, hiding the body from the main road. He
wiped his hands on his nondescript jumpsuit, then shucked out of it to reveal a
gray NASA security uniform. Kneeling, he unfastened the guard's badge and
pinned it on himself. He then folded the jumpsuit and stuffed it behind the
body. Sooner or later, some animal would take care of the details.
From the trunk, Rusty
lifted the box of carefully packed land mines and carried them around behind
the shack next to an old, empty water-cooler. A three-wheeled all-terrain
vehicle sat parked behind the shack, like a grown kid's toy. Rusty returned to
haul out the tripods, tripwires, motion sensors, and five FAMAS G2 automatic
assault rifles, piling them beside the shack for Duncan to set up once they had
left him in position.
Mr. Phillips took a
moment to step out of the car for a stretch. Curious, he peeked into the guard
shack, wondering what kind of man would just sit there in boredom all day long
waiting for something to happen . . . and then be completely unprepared for it
when it did. He shook his head.
Numerous mission patches adorned the walls, like poor man's
trophies. On the speckled Formica counter lay a new cloth patch for this
morning's Atlantis launch, colorful and embroidered, showing a bear and
an eagle. How patriotic. Mr. Phillips picked it up, fingering the rough,
regular texture of fine threads.
His lips formed a
gentle smile as he pocketed the patch, smoothing his suit jacket. "It'll
make a fine memento . . . might even be worth something someday." This
launch—or lack thereof—was sure to go down in history.
Mr. Phillips turned
to view the distant shuttle on the launchpad. The orbiter waited like a bridled
stallion, ready to leap into the void of space. He stared in awe, slowly
shaking his head. Such a magnificent machine. A technological marvel. The
pinnacle of mankind's engineering achievements. Elegant, sleek, fantastically
complicated . . . yet deceptively simple.
He sincerely hoped he
wouldn't have to blow it up.
Rusty brushed his
hands on his coveralls and came back to the car, jumping into the open rear
door. "Ready to go!"
"All right,
Duncan, take your position in the shack," said Mr. Phillips. "The
technicians' van is due out from its last routine checks on the launchpad. Be
sure to wave to the driver, since we're all friends here. Then close the gate
and plant your land mines and set up your targeting systems."
"Aye, Mr. Phillips,"
Duncan said, settling down into the colorful folding lawn chair. He yawned,
just like a real security guard, and placed his assault rifle under his chair.
Yvette shifted the
car into drive. Mr. Phillips glanced at his pocket watch again as he slammed
the passenger door and buckled his seatbelt. "Now we double back and get
to the Launch Control Center," he said. "We've got a schedule to
keep."
10
JACQUES DIDN'T BLINK WHEN the Klaxon on the pad gave a startling blast, announcing
the planned hold at T minus twenty minutes. Spooked by the sudden sound, a
group of snowy egrets beat their wings in unison and flew gracefully away from
the mangroves next to the launch complex. Activity heightened around the pad as
the last teams of technicians prepared to
leave.
A voice echoed over the intercom. “ Technicians, clear
the area. We’re ready to continue the countdown. I
say again, all technicians clear the area. Once clear, the countdown will
resume at T minus twenty minutes."
The army of white-suited techs moved away
from the shuttle in an orderly fashion; some waited for the elevators in the
Fixed Service Structure; those already on the ground hustled over to waiting
buses.
Whistling with
satisfaction, Jacques picked up his tool kit and moved along, just as a NASA
tech was expected to do. His tool kit weighed ten kilograms less without the
explosive device and detonators.
Standing in the
elevator as it began the long descent, Jacques took one last glance at the gaseous
oxygen vent access arm. The plastique was out of sight from the main gantry,
blending into the insulating foam encasing the massive external tank. As the
countdown continued, the access arm would retract, leaving the bomb behind, and
unreachable.
The elevator bumped to a stop at level 250.
A pair of technicians walked in and ignored Jacques. One carried a clipboard
and spoke with the other, obviously a trainee from the symbol on the person's
badge. They were in deep discussion about the final checklist procedure.
Jacques turned so
they couldn't see his face. He acted as calm as when he and Yvette had been
hustling Johns on the streets of Cahors, aloof as they sold their bodies,
disconnected from the reality around them. It was the only way to survive, the
same now as it was then—disconnect flesh and mind. Do what was necessary.
When he was younger
it had been difficult to take the strangers' money, to do whatever the men
wanted. He did not try to understand what pleasure they drew from their acts,
because he knew he would always return to Yvette's arms, where she would hold
him, rock him gently, then make love in her attempt to cleanse him and herself
of what they had gone through. It was the only way for them to survive on the
streets.
As the elevator
rattled down the gantry, Jacques felt disconnected from his body again as he
ran through Mr. Phillips's plan. The technician he had already killed was just
a small sacrifice for what they had to accomplish. An "investment,"
Mr. Phillips would have called it. Jacques held the man's electronic badge
tightly in his fist; the badges would be read by computer scanners at the exits
to ensure that everyone had left the pad. NASA would not resume the countdown
until the area was cleared.
He spotted the Armored Personnel Carrier at
the edge of the launch-pad complex. A technician walked out to the vehicle to
give a new water bottle to the guards stationed there. Good. No one would
suspect anything.
The last banks of
spotlights on the gantry spilled bright patches of light on the ground,
brighter than the morning sunshine. Jacques watched the stream of technicians
exit the area. It was difficult to see all of them as they walked in and out of
the glare. Security guards stood around the gates, but they all looked outward.
Jacques felt warm with satisfaction, knowing that no one suspected the
threat coming from within.
The elevator bumped
to a stop at ground level, and the other two technicians walked off. Jacques
passed a computerized checkpoint, sliding his badge through a magnetic-strip
reader. Intentionally fumbling as if he hadn't succeeded at first, he swapped
his own badge with that of the dead tech's, then slid it through the reader
again. All personnel accounted for.
One group of people
filtered off to the right, toward the first bus. Jacques joined the end of the
crowd, and as they stopped to file into the vehicle, he slowly backed up to the
massive flame trench, in the deep well of shadow out of the spotlights. In the
dark shelter Jacques immediately began to unzip his white bunny suit. He looked
from side to side as he stripped off the uniform, exposing a sand-camouflaged
jumpsuit. No one approached.
Balling it up, he
stuffed the suit in his nearly empty tool kit; it was too risky to leave the
suit lying around. Grasping the kit, Jacques crouched low and slipped toward
the Armored Personnel Carrier. Since the security cameras were broadcasting
only a continuous loop of landscape visuals, thanks to the work of Yvette, he
would be safe from electronic surveillance.
The APC sat in a
strategic position nearly a mile from the shuttle, close enough to the escape
slidewires that it could roar in to rescue the astronauts in case of an
emergency.
But Jacques had an
entirely different purpose in mind for it.
11
WHEN YVETTE PULLED THE white NASA car into the crowded parking lot of the Launch
Control Center, Mr. Phillips pointed to the left. "There—an empty space up
front. They must have known we were coming."
Yvette eased past
vans, pickups, and cars, most of which bore Challenger memorial license
plates, though a few said SAVE THE MANATEE. Mr. Phillips squinted to read
painted words on the curb, black letters on a scuffed white background. "Government
Vehicle Parking Only," he said.
"Ah, then we've got the right place. Wouldn't want to do anything illegal."
From the backseat
Rusty guffawed. Mr. Phillips turned and raised an eyebrow toward him. The
redhead shut up.
Rusty frequently got on his nerves, but Mr.
Phillips restrained himself from getting rid of him. For old times' sake . . .
but tolerance was getting harder.
After the crash of
his investment portfolio, and after he had vanished from the trading floor, he
had needed to commit "physical suicide." He would disappear with a
hefty profit even though his own investments had proved disastrous and had
wrecked a once strong family fortune. He would reemerge from the ashes as a new
person, leading a new life, with no strings attached.
But after he had
rigged his Porsche convertible to go over the cliff on the rugged New England
coast, sending it down into an automobile graveyard of jagged rocks and
crashing surf, he had turned around in the last moment to see Rusty pull up in
a battered pickup truck, watching the entire spectacle and grinning at Mr.
Phillips's misfortune.
Rusty had understood
exactly what Mr. Phillips was up to—and burst out laughing. The redhead had
taken him home, wanting a piece of the cloak-and-dagger lifestyle. He'd had
absolutely nothing to lose in his own life, and since that time Rusty had
proven a valuable compatriot, someone who didn't mind getting his hands dirty,
someone who could vanish into a crowd in places where Mr. Phillips wouldn't
demean himself. What he lacked in sophistication, Rusty made up in enthusiasm.
After today,
everything would pay off . . . or nothing would.
The three of them
climbed out of the car, and Mr. Phillips slid his PDA into the pocket of his
suit jacket, then popped a breath mint in his mouth. "Everybody ready?
It's show time."
He looked up at the
tall white building. The Launch Control Center was a "mid-sixties
modern" structure, four stories tall with white siding and curved corners.
Banks of narrow vertical windows faced toward the launchpads, covered with long
black shields that had been put in place during the Apollo days, when immense
Saturn V rockets lifted off with such a powerful blast that debris from a
launch explosion could conceivably pelt the LCC more than three miles away.
Rusty opened the
trunk of the car and removed their weapons. He checked the thumb safety and
tossed a Colt OHWS handgun with a flash-and-noise suppressor to Yvette, who
caught it smoothly and slid it into her clinging jumpsuit. She took her FAMAS
G2 automatic assault rifle and extra magazines of ammunition. Rusty pocketed his own
Colt OHWS and took another assault rifle for himself. He extended a 9-mm
Beretta toward Mr. Phillips, who politely waved it away. "Suit yourself,
Mr. Phillips." He stuck the Beretta in his other pocket. His freckled face
was flushed with excitement. He shouldered a backpack of ammunition.
They had left one
more guard dead in his shack just outside the LCC parking lot, and this time
they had not bothered to use a disguised replacement. Part of him was disgusted
that each step had proven so easy thus far—it had been only six months since
they had sabotaged the Ariane rocket; he would have thought NASA's heightened
security awareness might have lasted a bit longer than that. He supposed after
today some jobs would come under serious review.
The time for subtlety
was over. Now their plan called for brashness and quick thinking. They had to
get inside the building without drawing attention to themselves—TV cameras and
the press bleachers lay half a mile to the south, and they could turn the LCC
into an armed fortress filled with hostages.
"Let's move
inside," Mr. Phillips said. He adjusted his tie and the space shuttle
lapel pin. "I don't want to depend too heavily on our grace period."
He held the glass door open for Yvette. She nodded at his politeness.
The lobby was
decorated with dark blue cushioned chairs, courtesy telephones, and a
Plexiglas-encased model of the entire Kennedy Space Center. Rusty held his
pistol with the silencer up in the air; Yvette hung her assault rifle over her
left shoulder.
A lobby guard turned
as they entered. Another creaked forward in his chair behind a security desk,
standing up in surprise as he saw the weapons. "Excuse me! You
can't—" The other guard fumbled for his side arm clipped into its holster.
Rusty brought down
his handgun and squeezed off two shots, rapidly moving from one guard to the
other. Thin coughing sounds came from his silencer. The two guards dropped onto
the linoleum floor.
"Like shooting
sitting geese," said Yvette.
"Ducks,"
Rusty corrected. "Sitting ducks."
Mr. Phillips pointed
to the rest room doors. "Drag the two bodies into the ladies' room. It's
probably used less than the gentlemen's, unless NASA hired a great many more
female employees since I last checked."
"What about the
blood?" Rusty said, motioning to the floor.
"We'll have to
leave it for the night custodian." Mr. Phillips said. "Quickly
now."
Rusty and Yvette each
took a guard by the arms and dragged the bodies across the linoleum floor. The
guards' black shoes squeaked on the tiles. Yvette kicked open the door to the
rest room and hauled the first man inside, while Rusty followed.
Waiting, Mr. Phillips
inspected the educational models on display, like a tourist. Pursing his lips,
he studied the mockup of the cube-shaped Vehicle Assembly Building, launchpad
39A, and the Orbiter Processing Facility where the shuttles were reconditioned
and prepared for each launch. The left-hand wall was lined with wooden plaques,
each bearing the mission patch design for every shuttle launch. Beneath each
plaque dangled two small metal tags, engraved with the launch date and landing
date for each STS mission.
He heard a
high-pitched cry and then another muffled gunshot in the ladies' room.
Frowning, he pulled out his pocket watch. He forced himself to be patient, but
time was running short. What had Rusty stumbled into now?
Yvette and Rusty
stepped out of the bathroom, letting the wooden door sigh shut on pneumatic
hinges. Rusty brushed his hands together as if proud of a job well done. Yvette
breathed deeply, her cheeks flushed with excitement. She glided her handgun
back into her pocket. "A woman fixing her makeup in front of the
mirror," she said.
"She looked such
a mess!" Rusty laughed. "Definitely!"
Mr. Phillips flashed
a disgusted look; the redhead had no tact whatsoever. Although Rusty had helped
him in the past, he would have to reevaluate the redhead's terms of employment
after they were finished.
"How
unfortunate," said Mr. Phillips. He drew in a deep breath, feeling elated
at clearing the last obstacle before entering the control center. "All
right now, double quick."
He led the way across
the lobby, knowing exactly where to go. He had spent the same amount of time
preparing for this mission as NASA normally spent preparing for a shuttle
liftoff itself. He knew the floor layout of the LCC as well as he knew the
interior of the Connecticut house where he had grown up. Even better. Because
he had dreamed of coming here, to the nerve center of the space program, while
he had hated his mother's cold, old mansion. Mother's house had been dark and
lonely; the LCC was vibrant, full of energy, a taste of the future.
He took the corridor
to the left. The building was an artifact of the sixties, with thick coats of
beige paint on the cinderblock wall, a brown vinyl baseboard against a linoleum
floor. Mr. Phillips shook his head, distressed at the austere conditions. A
high-tech agency such as NASA should have the sleekest, most modern facilities
. . . but much of their facilities looked like something out of an old television
rerun. Inexcusable, he thought, but telling.
"Launch Control
itself is on the third floor," Mr. Phillips said. "Provided we can
get up to the mezzanine VIP viewing area before anyone discovers our handiwork,
we should be home free." He used his fingers to brush down his lapels.
"Should we take
the stairs?" Rusty said.
Mr. Phillips pursed
his lips and shook his head. "No, we'll use the elevators. No sense
getting out of breath. We'll need our stamina for . . . other things." He
felt the adrenaline surge through his veins. The excitement reminded him of
stepping out onto the trading floor for the very first time. He was about to
make a killing.
Rusty began to laugh
again, and this time Mr. Phillips ignored him.
12
RETURNING TO THE MAIN firing floor of the Launch Control Center, Nicole Hunter
slid her badge through the magnetic-strip reader to gain access.
"The crew has boarded the shuttle, and the hatch is sealed," one of the station chiefs told her. "Pad is cleared and safed."
"Right on
time," Nicole said, with a glance at the countdown clock on the wall.
Though Commander Franklin had a conscientious crew, as Launch Director she was
the one responsible for making sure everything happened down to the precise second. Remember
the six Ps, she thought: Prior preparation prevents piss-poor
performance—and nobody did it better than NASA. She ran a hand quickly
through her brown-gold hair, then moved along, keyed up ... and loving it.
One of the women
station chiefs looked up and announced, "The last bus has returned from
the launchpad. Beach Road, Kennedy Parkway, and the crawler access road are now
closed."
"Copy
that," said one of the other technicians.
"Perimeter gates
six T, four, and two C are green. Aerial surveillance reports the area as
secure," announced another.
"APCs in place
for emergency rescue. Standing by."
Nicole looked down at
her own checklist, watching the items. The information flew at her like water
spraying from a fire hydrant. One station after another checked in. Nicole
glanced down at a TV monitor from the launchpad cameras, seeing the gantry and
the stately shuttle with its rust-brown external tank and tall solid rocket
boosters like fat white pencils tacked to each side. The Rotating Service
Structure had moved aside, but the venting "beanie cap" remained
firmly in place atop the external tank. Wisps of cirrus clouds drifted across
the screen.
Nicole looked out the
window; the morning sky shone perfectly clear, no clouds. That's odd. She
slurped the dregs of her sweet dark coffee and tossed the plastic foam cup in a
wastebasket. She dismissed the discrepancy as someone else demanded her
attention.
"Guard gates
checking in for their final report," said a station tech. "Everyone
gives the clear—" The man frowned, spoke into his microphone again,
waited. "Everyone checks in except for one guard gate."
Nicole felt a wash of
concern. "One of the perimeter gates?"
"No, perimeter
gates are all green," the man said. "It's the station directly
outside the LCC. Right next door, nowhere close to the launch-pad."
Nicole heaved a short
sigh of relief. "He's probably out gawking at the shuttle with his
binoculars. Call Security Control. Have them cover the gate and admonish the
guard for leaving his station. Proceed with the countdown."
She looked around,
saw teams intent at their stations, some speaking into telephones, others
studying computer displays. Dot-matrix printers documented each step. The
entire LCC was a whirring, smoothly running machine in high gear.
She touched the tiny
gold key on her necklace and smiled, totally satisfied with her position and
her responsibility.
Nicole called her
deputy over, a quiet, older man with a short crew cut. "Handle the floor
for a few minutes," she said. "I'm going back to the VIP area to hold
some hands and coddle a barracuda."
Securing the glass
door with her badge, she trotted up the mezzanine steps to where the honored
guests looked down at the activity like spectators at a zoo. The technicians
had by now become accustomed to performing their daily routine under a
magnifying glass.
Ambassador Andrei
Trovkin, the Russian liaison, stood with his hands clasped behind his back,
staring out the narrow windows toward the launchpad. On a low hill to the right
stood press stands crowded with TV crews and newspaper photographers. They
would get a breathtaking view of the launch across the Banana River toward Cape
Canaveral. Separate white-sided buildings bore the logos of major networks,
ABC, NBC, CBS, and CNN. Behind them sat the old trailers of NASA's Media
Relations Bureau. On a tall flagpole an American flag hung limp in the morning
stillness. The digital numbers on the large countdown clock winked down for the
press.
"Feeling the
suspense build, Ambassador Trovkin?" she asked the Russian.
He turned to her with
a preoccupied smile. "I am astonished how wonderfully public American
launches are," he said. "In Russia they never used to be announced at
all. Oh, and call me Andrei, please."
"Then you must
call me Nicole."
"Thank
you." He nodded to her.
She turned to one of
the runners. "Would you get me another coffee please? Two sugars—"
The young man nodded.
"—and no cream. I know, Ms. Hunter." He turned to dash down the steps
just as the elevator chime rang.
The doors slid open,
and three strangers emerged, blocking the runner's way. One of the newcomers—a
statuesque woman with close-cropped hair so blond it looked white—shoved the
runner into the cinderblock wall, as if batting a fly out of the way. The
strangers jogged briskly up the mezzanine stairs and spread out.
With the freeze-frame
vision brought about from adrenaline, Nicole saw that the blond woman carried a
compact automatic assault rifle. One man who emerged with her—bright orange-red
hair and a coppery spattering of freckles across his face—brandished two
handguns, one with a prominent phallic silencer screwed to the barrel. A
compact assault rifle was strapped across his chest.
The dapper man
between them looked calmly in charge. He was quite short, no more than five
feet, dressed in a dark pinstripe suit that sported a gold-and-white space
shuttle pin on the lapel. His demeanor and appearance reminded her of a
comically polite English butler.
"Excuse me, who
are you?" Nicole said, feeling a tightness in her chest. She stepped back
to push the silent alarm that would summon the security guards from the lobby.
"That alarm
won't be necessary," the nattily dressed man said, his lips drawn together
into a flowerbud frown. "I'm afraid no one is available to take your call
downstairs."
The redhead chuckled,
but the short man silenced him with a sharp glance before he turned to the
others gathered in the observation deck. "May I have your attention,
please? My name is Mr. Phillips. I believe we have about five minutes before
the first of your security forces arrives, so I would like to lay down a few
ground rules. They'll be most useful. Yvette, Rusty—would you join me?"
Trovkin, Senator
Boorman and his aides, and the other guests stood up with a mixture of
indignation and uncertainty, looking at the ominous weapons. Boorman's crew of
four cameramen turned. Sensing news in the making, they pointed their video
cams at Mr. Phillips and his two companions.
Nicole froze, her
mind spinning. She couldn't sort out the procedures she had learned for dealing
with a situation like this.
"I apologize for
the intrusion," the dapper man said, "but unfortunately I have found
it necessary. There will be a slight modification to the launch plans today,
but I'm fully aware of your launch window, Ms. Nicole Hunter." His direct
use of her name startled her, although the identity of the Launch Director was
certainly no secret. "So I will make every effort to prevent a delay. I
know how costly scrubbing a shuttle launch can be."
Nicole blinked. This
was crazy—unless this Phillips character had an army of people covering him,
literally hundreds of NASA, military, and state police would be here within the
next few minutes. "Whoever you are, I think you underestimate the defenses
of the space center." She stepped forward but stopped when the freckled
man leveled one of his pistols at her not more than five feet away.
"Thank you,
Rusty," said Mr. Phillips. He turned to Nicole. "Should your security
people charge in here like a bunch of superheroes, they may encounter some
unexpected obstacles."
Squaring his broad shoulders, Andrei Trovkin strode next to
Nicole, his face florid with rage. "How dare you bring guns here? This
mission has half Russian crew! You are causing international incident!"
Mr. Phillips pulled
his lips tight, as if annoyed at the interruption. He studied the badge on
Trovkin's chest. The urbane man barely came up to the Russian's sternum.
"Ah, my foreign friend, let's make good use of the few minutes until NASA
Security rears its ugly head." He pulled out a gray-cased Personal Data
Assistant, flipped open the liquid-crystal screen, and withdrew a stylus.
Touching the screen and selecting names, he called up a file and studied the
words on the screen.
"Here we
are!" he said triumphantly. "Andrei Ivanovich Trovkin, born in
Belorus, received a degree in engineering and aerospace science, completed Air
Force and cosmonaut training, but was excused"—he said the word
slowly, as if with distaste—"from further cosmonaut service due to a heart
murmur. Pity." Mr. Phillips shook his head. "Just like Deke
Slayton—but he finally got a chance to fly on the Apollo-Soyuz mission, so
don't give up hope."
As Trovkin sputtered,
Nicole turned to Phillips, calm and professional. All they needed were a few
more minutes and security would be here. She wanted to keep him talking.
"So you've done your homework. What is it you want?"
Senator Boorman
stepped up, his face stormy and indignant, putting on an air of command he must
have used often on the Senate floor. "Our nation has a clearly stated
policy of refusing to negotiate with terrorists. Whatever you have planned is
hopeless." The news cameras quickly pointed at him, capturing every moment
of the tableau.
"Ah, Senator
Boorman," Mr. Phillips said with ill-concealed distaste, "let me
see." He glanced down at his PDA screen, calling up new data. "My,
what a long file you have. But one thing stands out." He raised his
eyebrows curiously. "Why exactly were you arrested wearing woman's
underwear coming out of the sorority dorm in nineteen sixty-five? May
twenty-fifth? Do you recall that incident, Senator Boorman?"
The senator gasped,
then turned red with anger. "I won't be intimidated—"
Mr. Phillips cut him
off. "I've already intimidated you, and I've got condensed files on
every person here, so maybe we'll have a show-and-tell for the television
audience. But that will have to be later, since we need to move rather quickly
on this—I have only another minute before your cavalry arrives. And I fear I
may need to make my point, unless NASA Security is willing to take my
assurances at face value." He stepped up to one of the video cameras
positioned high in a corner. Looking up, he cleared his throat and spoke
directly to the camera.
"First, I know
we're being monitored by security personnel. Let me assure you that if any
attempt is made to enter this building, we will shoot our hostages. All of
them. It's as simple as that." He snapped his finger at the tall blond
woman, the one he had called Yvette.
Holding her assault
rifle on the crowd of VIPs, Yvette withdrew a small respirator mask from one of
the green satchels she carried. She handed it to Mr. Phillips, who dangled it
up to the camera. "Second, we have gas masks, and our hostages don't. If
any gas comes in, the hostages die. Need I say more?" He tossed the mask
back to Yvette; she caught it with a casual flick of her wrist. "So, do not
attempt to enter this building. I also have numerous colleagues stationed
at strategic positions around the entire launch site, and they have orders to
severely punish any misbehavior."
Stepping away from
the camera, Mr. Phillips folded his hands together and raked his gaze over his
audience. "Ms. Hunter, you are the person with whom I wish to speak."
He glanced sidelong at the senator. "I've always had little respect for .
. . that man and his narrow-minded politics."
Nicole kept her
expression stony, but inside she felt a horrid fear. She had to play him out,
take this carefully.
Mr. Phillips glanced
at the security video cameras in the ceiling. "Rusty, could you remove
those please? Leave one, but shoot the rest. I prefer to have more direct
control over the images broadcast from here."
Rusty pointed the
pistol in his right hand at the observation cameras. "Definitely!"
With short hisses of silenced gunshots, glass, metal, and black plastic flew as
the cameras blew apart.
The news reporters
pointed their own lenses at the spectacle.
Just for effect,
Rusty fired two more times into the acoustic ceiling panels. Boorman's aides
drew around the senator. Most of the others cringed, but Nicole made a great
effort to stand stock-still, without flinching. Everyone would be looking to
her, and as much as she felt like cowering, she had to be strong.
"Now, if you
will all be patient," Mr. Phillips said quietly, "I will issue my
demands and explain the consequences if you do not meet them. Let us keep the shuttle
astronauts unaware of the situation for the moment. We wouldn't want them to
overreact."
He checked his pocket watch, then snapped it shut again, I assure you, everything is under control." He smiled pleasantly. "And I do very much enjoy being in control."
13
ATLANTIS FLIGHT DECK
GATOR GREEN REACHED DOWN to the center console on Atlantis’s flight deck and
flipped through the laminated checklist resting on his leg. Same as in all the
simulations—only this time it was for real. It should have made no difference,
no matter that he was decked out in a pressure suit and wore his helmet. He
stopped just before touching the switch and read from the checklist.
"Orbital maneuvering system pressurization check."
"Check,"
Marc Franklin said in a flat, professional voice. Franklin read from an identical
checklist in the mission commander's chair on the left-hand side of the
compartment.
Gator flipped both
switches marked OMS ENG. "Armed." He swung his attention to the
overhead panel, near Franklin. "Increasing cabin pressure to sixteen point
seven psi."
Franklin watched the
results carefully. "Cabin leak check complete."
Gator clicked his
mike. "Control, Atlantis. OMS pressure on, cabin vent check
complete."
"Roger
that."
Atlantis vibrated
with internal pumps, relays, and switches groaning under the constant
contracting and expansion from the cryogenic fuel in the external tank. The
shuttle seemed alive and anxious to go as Gator went methodically through the
rest of the checklist.
He completed the
voice check as Franklin reached down to close both cabin vent switches. As they
completed the sequence, the voice from CAPCOM came over the radio. "Change
of plan, Atlantis. We are continuing to extend our hold. Please stand
by."
Gator sighed and
clicked his mike. "Copy that." He wondered how long the delay would
be this time.
He looked over at
Franklin. Although it was the commander's fourth space flight, the older man
looked as nervous as a rookie but capped it off with a brittle, forced stoicism
that only increased the tension for Gator. On his other flights, Franklin had
been a mere mission specialist. It must make one hell of a difference
knowing you're responsible for the entire crew, Gator thought. He wondered
if Iceberg ever felt that way.
If this mission had gone off as originally planned, Gator knew that Iceberg would probably have been fast asleep in the commander's chair during the extended hold, catching a few winks. The man oozed coolness, and his calm attitude infected every member of the crew so that no one had any doubt the mission would be a complete success.
He remembered being
with Iceberg and Nicole at a cookout on the patio of his rented bachelor pad in
Canaveral City, flipping burgers on a smoking Weber grill, horsing around to
show off for Monique, a woman he had ended up dating for only two months. He
splashed Tabasco sauce on the burgers as they sizzled over the flames, urging
his guests to drink more lemonade. He had gotten it into his head that he
wanted to try to make some fresh-squeezed lemonade the way his mother had done
it once, and so he spent the afternoon making a godawful mess of his kitchen,
massacring a whole bag full of lemons—and, dammit, Iceberg and Nicole were going to drink the
stuff, no matter how much sugar they needed to add.
Monique had told him
later that night how much she envied the stability apparent in Iceberg and
Nicole's relationship. . . .
Now, up on the flight
deck, he and Franklin had an indefinite amount of time to kill. Gator tried to
loosen some of the tension that permeated the cabin. He turned off his mike so
that his voice would not be broadcast over the shuttle, much less over the
radio. He leaned close to Franklin. "Hey, Marc—once we dock with Mir, it'd
be easy to remain connected; let us stay up there awhile. You know, continue
glasnost by giving some of their crew a break. We could have a poker
game."
Franklin looked up
from studying the flight checklist again. His eyes were red, tired through the
helmet. "You must be kidding."
Gator fought to keep a
straight face. Of course I'm kidding. "They might want to take a
vacation on board Atlantis while we explore their station. Every nook
and cranny. Nobody else needs to know."
Alexandra Koslovsky
leaned forward from her mission specialist seat, situated just behind the pilot
and mission commander's position. Her long straw-colored hair was stuffed
inside the fabric Snoopy headgear. "Discussing travel plans, Lieutenant
Commander Gator?"
Franklin stiffened.
"We're just going over the post-launch checklist, Cosmonaut
Koslovsky." He didn't sound convincing.
Gator gave Alexandra
a wink. "And to think we could have opened up a new frontier for
international relations."
Franklin snorted,
realizing his leg had been pulled. He turned back to the checklist.
"You've had your fun, Gator. No more, understand?"
"That's a
rog," said Gator. "Just trying to lighten things up." He turned
to the next item on the checklist: Load flight plan OPS-1 into the computer.
He'd have to load the program after the hold. Whenever it ended.
From here on out it
was following a set schedule of checklists. It reminded him of preparing for a
game at Annapolis, with the play strategy laid out days in advance. All he had
to do was to run on the football field, with four thousand midshipmen yelling
their heads off, waving their white wheel caps in the air—and execute the plan
without errors.
At the back of his
mind, as had probably happened with every single astronaut in the past decade,
was the image of the Challenger disaster, the shuttle passing through
max q with all readouts indicating complete success—until that gut-wrenching
moment when it all went wrong. How could anyone sit aboard the shuttle on the launchpad and not
think of that while waiting for the countdown to commence?
Gator pushed the
image out of his mind. He couldn't afford to dwell on it. With or without
Iceberg as commander, this mission was going to go. Nothing could stop them
now.
With Franklin, he ran
though the post-launch checklist again, all the time glancing at the mechanical
switches, old cathode-ray tubes, LED switches, and computer pads. Gator reached
to his right and reattached the checklist to a Velcro pad, then stretched. He
glanced at the countdown clock and frowned in concern. "Hey, Marc—we're
pushing up against the hold limit."
Franklin scanned a
row of lighted buttons, double-checked the countdown clock himself. He clicked
the microphone. "CAPCOM, Atlantis. You're keeping mighty quiet out
there. What's going on? Give us some good news."
It took a
disquietingly long moment for Houston to come back. "Atlantis, CAPCOM.
We are still in an indefinite hold. Standby one."
Gator raised his
brows and looked at Franklin. "What do you think? Are they looking for an
abort? What could it be?" The ground crew had a perfectionist reputation
before okaying a launch.
Franklin looked grim,
then disgusted. He flicked the comm switch again. "CAPCOM, can you give us
details?"
"That's a
negatory. No data at this time, Atlantis."
Gator clicked his own
mike, letting disbelief trickle into his voice. "Come on, you don't have
an indication of the problem? Are we scrubbing the launch?"
"The hold was
directed by the Launch Director herself. We'll feed you more information as we
get it from KSC."
Gator shifted in his
seat. Lying on his back staring up into the sky was getting damned
uncomfortable. "CAPCOM, put me through to Panther—uh, Ms. Hunter, I
mean."
"Sorry, Atlantis.
We're having comm problems with Launch Control. We'll keep you
updated."
"Comm
problems?" Gator sounded incredulous.
"We've got to
shut down, Atlantis—we'll be out of communication with you for a while.
Relax while we deadstart the comm link."
Gator clicked his
microphone twice to signify that he understood the directions. He frowned. Deadstart
the system? That's weird. He shrugged. Somebody probably found a hangnail
somewhere.
"Not much we can
do," Franklin said. "You heard CAPCOM "
“How about letting us unbuckle and get some blood back in our
feet, Marc? No telling how long these clowns are going to keep us waiting.”
Franklin looked grim. “Our launch window won’t allow more than a
half hour hold before we have to reschedule." He started to unfasten his
straps while speaking over the in-board intercom to the rest of the crew. “Okay, let’s take a short break, helmets off—but be ready to strap back in.”
Now unbuckled,
Alexandra Koslovsky leaned forward. She grasped the back of his seat to support
herself. "What do you think the problem is, Lieutenant Commander
Gator?"
Gator twisted and
looked at the pretty Russian cosmonaut. He gave her a disarming grin. "Who
knows—gremlins, probably. No launch goes without some kind of hitch"
14
EMERGENCY KLAXONS BLARED THROUGHOUT the main NASA security complex. Many
buildings were empty, with workers camping out in folding lawn chairs in the
parking lots or gathered on viewing stands to watch the impending launch. But
the alarms screamed on.
Khaki-and-black
uniformed guards poured from Security Control, carrying automatic rifles and
struggling to tug on flak jackets. They wore thick black boots with
steel-plated insoles and head-mounted microphones with tiny speaker earplugs.
The guards ran for their black all-terrain vehicles, slammed heavy doors, and
started their engines.
Radios mounted inside
the ATVs spat out sharp voices: "All teams, this is a priority one alert.
This is not an exercise—repeat, not an exercise. Hostage situation at
LCC and possible danger to pad thirty-nine A. Sensors and video cameras have
been neutralized, situation unknown."
Team members
scrambled to fall in as the crisp voice continued barking orders. "Employ
scenario G for Golf. Teams switch to respective buttons: Team One, switch to
button one; Team Two, button two . . ."
Each five-person
security unit changed to a preset channel in addition to the coordinating
frequency used by Security Control. Cool excitement permeated the teams; they
had trained for this moment for years, but no one had really thought they would
be called into action. Who would have the nerve—the gall—to attack the
Kennedy Space Center?
Seven ATVs squealed
out of the parking lot. Three headed for the guard gate at the southeast point
of the restricted launch area; the other four raced up State Highway 1, toward
the threatened Launch Control Center.
On the Gulf shore
across the Florida peninsula, U.S. Central command Headquarters at McDill Air
Force Base was notified of a potential national emergency unfolding. The
message percolated through the command's enlisted force, the first line of
administration that monitored the launch. Several minutes passed before the
news reached someone with the authority to take direct action. The Air Force
special operations C-130 aircraft that had earlier been routinely monitoring
the vicinity from high above was diverted from its standoff area.
Twenty miles south at
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, a team of elite Air Force security policemen
charged into action. News of the alert spread from the Federal Emergency
Management Agency to the Department of Defense crisis-management network as
military personnel methodically prepared for a decisive response.
Back at Kennedy Space
Center, whining sounds came from two helicopters squatting on the center of a
concrete pad as the pilots revved onboard auxiliary power units. It would take
two full minutes until they could start their rotors, and the required time
seemed to take forever to the pilots and guards that had rushed on board and
strapped themselves in, ready to go. Four helicopters already patrolling the
skies tipped their rotors toward the LCC.
The first black
all-terrain vehicle screeched up to the white Launch Control building. The
five-person security team poured out of the armored vehicle and, using the bulk
of the ATV as a shield, readied their weapons while crouching.
The team leader
raised her fist. "Team One, check in. Alpha here."
Each person keyed his
head-mounted microphone. "Bravo."
"Charlie."
"Delta."
"Echo."
Satisfied that her
team was ready, the leader gripped the cool muzzle of her M-16 automatic rifle.
"Orders are to surround the building only. Do not get closer than fifty
feet. Execute."
The team spread out
as the backup ATVs roared up from Security Control. The team leader keyed her
mike. "Team one is in position and the situation is in hand. Waiting for
your instruction."
"Proceed with
caution, Alpha," said Security Control. "We have a hostage situation
in there with some VIPs."
As Team 1 sprinted
for the perimeter of the tall white building, a barrage of automatic rifle fire
rang out from the stairwell on the third story. Instantly, two members of Team
1 fell to the ground as if they had been struck with baseball bats; a third
spun in his tracks, hit in the arm.
Team 1 Leader dove
for cover behind a parked car as she screamed into her microphone. "Back
off, back off! Security Control, live fire— abort G for Golf." She huddled
beside the parked car and gasped for breath. Bullets showered all around the
vehicle. Adjacent windshields burst, and glass shattered, falling to the ground
like broken icicles. The other ATVs spun their wheels in an effort to back
away.
Team 1 Leader tried
to get a glimpse of her team members, taking a tally of casualties. She spotted
two of the four members lying on the ground, their blood seeping onto the black
pavement. She shouted into her headset. "Team One, report! Alpha
here."
"Echo. I'm okay
under cover behind a red pickup truck."
"Delta,"
came a weaker voice. "I'm hit. Bleeding. I can last a little while,
though."
A voice came over her
head-mounted earphone. "Team One, this is Security Control. What is your
assessment?"
"We're still
under fire. Three team members hit." Breathing deeply she looked at the
second hand on her watch and counted the number of bullets she heard smack into
the ATV and around her. "Things have tapered off, but there's still plenty
of action."
"Can you spot
where the firing is coming from?"
"I think there's
only one gunman, but he means business. Appears to be shooting from the
third-floor stairwell, a perfect strategic position."
"Offer medical
assistance to your team members, if you can do it safely. Reinforcements on the
way. Do not proceed with the assault."
She sat back to wait
while the bullets continued to rain around her.
Three black ATVs
roared up to Salvador's guard shack at the far southeast point of the
restricted launch area. The security personnel inside the vehicles gripped the
sleek barrels of their weapons as they listened to the updates coming from
their colleagues in Team Alpha outside the LCC. "Sounds like they got a
war going on over there!" Just as they approached the guard gate, the
first ATV drove over a tripwire, triggered a land mine, and flew up into the
air.
Mounted on tripods
hidden in the brush at the side of the road, remote-controlled assault weapons
opened fire. A volley of bullets ripped into the sides of the black ATVs. Glass
shattered, metal punctured by the armor-piercing rounds. Screams from the
jumpsuited guards quickly died out. The first ATV rolled over in the ditch and
groaned, a molten hulk.
Twenty yards down the
road, just outside the guard shack, a lone man clicked his radio. "Yo, Mr.
Phillips—Duncan at checkpoint one. No survivors for the first wave. Three
vehicles down. A beauty."
It took only an
instant for the answer from the LCC. "Very good, Duncan. Thank you.
Perhaps our NASA friends will listen more attentively from here on out."
Satisfied, Duncan
turned back to watch for more incoming traffic. Plenty of land mines remained
scattered around the area, and he could easily pick off anyone who tried to
disarm them.
He strode forward to
reload the expended magazines of ammunition. He lit a menthol cigarette, rifle
in hand, and went back to his lawn chair to wait.
15
ICEBERG SAT BEHIND THE brush-covered rise, well hidden from the routine search
patterns and confident that he would remain undiscovered. The launchpad was in
the distance, its access road more than a mile away. He heard sirens behind
him, probably the last warning blasts of security personnel to clear the
restricted area. Under other circumstances, this might have felt like a picnic.
But he should have been up there in the cockpit right now.
Iceberg watched NASA's coverage of the launch on the Walkman TV. He didn't waste much time worrying about politics, but he thought Senator Boorman had dominated the news for far too long. Didn't the reporters have their priorities straight on launch day at least?
Now, the only thing
on the screen was a distant shot of Atlantis. The technicians had
cleared the launch area before the T minus twenty hold, which had been extended
for some reason Nicole hadn't yet bothered to explain. Maybe she just needed to
touch up her makeup, or maybe she had found a green card that wasn't on a
checklist.
Iceberg leaned back,
propping the miniature TV in the soft dirt so he could have an unobstructed
view of the pad. Atlantis looked beautiful in the clear morning sky.
Daylight caught the top of the gantry as cryogenic oxygen and hydrogen boiled
faint wisps of steam into the muggy air.
The TV replayed an
earlier interview with the Launch Director. Here, alone with his thoughts where
no one could see him, Iceberg had to admit that Nicole looked good on the tube.
Damn good, in fact. She'd kept her cool dealing with numb nuts from Washington
and those pestering reporters. Of course, if she could put up with him, then
an antagonistic senator would have been a piece of cake. Iceberg never had the
patience for all those dances with words. He wanted to do something, not
explore how many different ways one could talk about it.
But talking and
planning had always been Nicole's style. Stand up against the odds and fight it
out, finding some political compromise that let both sides feel they had won.
She didn't give up easily. Except when it came to being an astronaut.
Iceberg shook his
head. He dug his fingers into the dirt, wishing the launch would hurry up and
happen. Get that shuttle up into the sky! He hated just sitting here with
nothing to do but think.
He caught a glimpse
of the countdown clock superimposed on the lower right corner of the TV
picture, and frowned. The extended hold had been going on for quite a while. Of
course, unplanned delays happened all the time. Maybe the NASA bureaucrats
couldn't make up their minds about what type of toilet paper to put on board.
The scene switched
from a far-off view of the shuttle to an image from a camera on top of the
Fixed Service Structure, showing the oxygen vent access arm partially
retracted. Then another view, this time of the shuttle's main engines. The pad
looked deserted, as it should have been.
Iceberg leaned
forward and turned up the sound. Something still didn't seem right. On the TV
those cirrus clouds above the shuttle were
still there, but it must be some kind of ghost image
on the screen. He saw no clouds for miles around.
The sound of a
low-flying helicopter startled him. The copter suddenly burst over the
brush-covered rise, flying like a bat out of hell. Its down-wash threw up
debris and toppled the small Walkman TV.
"Shit!"
Iceberg scrambled away, hopping on one foot to get to cover. A streak of pain
shot through his foot where the healing bones ground together like fingernails
on a chalkboard. The helicopter wheeled in the sky and headed to his left, as
if it were searching for something. Him, probably.
Iceberg cursed. He
must have set off some kind of alarm, tripping one of the motion or sonic
sensors. And now they were out looking for him. Maybe he was the reason
for the extended hold in the countdown. He knew he was going to look like a
fool.
The helicopter made
another pass, but Iceberg wasn't sure whether they had spotted him. Then the
craft roared off, straight for the launchpad.
He felt a sour
feeling creep into his stomach as he realized that the guard Salvador was
probably being harassed this very minute. The poor guy had worked at KSC for
years without getting into trouble; now Iceberg had involved him in something
that just might get the old guard fired.
Iceberg could BS his
way through whatever reprimands might come his way. He'd get a slap on the
wrist, and he'd have to kiss some nonflying puke's rear end. But they'd let him
off. After all, he was a modern-day hero—shuttle commander and senior
member of the astronaut corps.
He just hoped that
he'd be able to sweet-talk the bureaucrats into letting Salvador off as well.
Well, if they were
out looking for him, they'd eventually find him. Especially with this broken
foot. Better to surrender now and cut his losses, let the countdown continue,
get his crew up into space during the launch window.
Iceberg gathered up
his TV and binoculars, then trudged gingerly toward the guard shack, ready to
make up a good story.
16
INSIDE THE LCC, NICOLE watched a NASA security helicopter chop its way through the
air, thundering across the sky toward the launch-pad where Atlantis waited,
its countdown frozen. Three other copters swept low over the restricted launch
area, hunting for additional terrorists. A firecracker sound of gunshots had
echoed down the hall, coming from the stairwell that looked out on the LCC
parking lot. Far away, Rusty shot repeatedly, letting out whoops of delight
every time he hit his targets. Nicole moved over to the wall beside Andrei
Trovkin, peering through the vertical observation windows. She placed her hands
against the thick glass as the dark insect shape of the helicopter pounded
away, skirting the LCC toward the swamps. Her heart pounded with instinctive
relief that help was on the way . . . yet she felt an inner dread of what might
happen. The terrorists seemed to have few compunctions about murder.
"Do helicopters
really think they can stop this madman?" Trovkin snorted with a glance
back at Mr. Phillips, who studiously inspected his fingernails, oblivious to
his precarious hold on the situation.
Rusty returned from down
the hall, wiping sweat from his freckled forehead and grinning. He shouldered
his automatic assault rifle. "Bull's-eye! I think I won myself a stuffed
teddy bear. You should have seen those security troops running like ants under
a hot magnifying glass!"
With a disappointed
sigh, Mr. Phillips shook his head. "Duncan tells me we've had some
excitement out by his guard shack as well, and now these pesky helicopters.
NASA doesn't seem to be taking our threat seriously, which I find quite
exasperating. Don't they even want to hear what I have to say before
they come blasting in? Talk about short attention spans."
He picked up his
walkie-talkie and tuned to the chosen frequency. "Mory, are you there? How
would you like to do a little duck hunting?"
With a squelch of
static a man's thin, nasal voice came back. "Ready and waiting, Mr.
Phillips. Any problem with Cueball doing the honors? He's pretty anxious for
some action, and he needs the target practice."
Mr. Phillips sounded
impatient. "I asked you, Mory. I don't want to risk missing, not
with the television networks watching. That would be most embarrassing."
"No problem.
Does it matter which helicopter I take out?"
Mr. Phillips pursed
his lips. "Just make it spectacular for our viewers out in TV land."
"Stay tuned for
the Fourth of July," Mory answered, signing off.
Mr. Phillips wore a
smug smile that Nicole wanted to wipe off his face with a hot iron. Her stomach
tightened as she forced down her hot-tempered reflex. "Let me get on the
radio, Mr. Phillips. I'll tell the security teams to back off so you can issue
your demands."
"I think I'd
prefer a more dramatic demonstration," he said. "Watch."
A white finger of
fire erupted from the swampy lowlands as the unseen sniper launched a deadly
projectile.
"A Stinger
missile," Mr. Phillips said. "Lightweight, portable, easily fired,
easy to aim. A thousand and one uses."
The missile targeted
the NASA helicopter closest to the LCC. The pilot swerved his aircraft, but the
ground-launched rocket moved at intercept speed. The Stinger struck the
helicopter, and both exploded in a huge flash displayed on the TV screens.
"Not as great a
technological marvel as the space shuttle, but still exhilarating,
nonetheless," Mr. Phillips said, then grabbed the walkie-talkie.
"Good shot, Mory."
Nicole found herself
hyperventilating, her heart pounding. "You just killed those men!"
"Let us not be
sexist here," Mr. Phillips said. "One of the crew could have been a
woman. And you're forgetting the three security vehicles out by the gate—there
could have been women on that security team as well. And who knows how many
Rusty shot out in the LCC parking lot? I'm sure it wasn't just men. We believe
in equal opportunity."
He grew suddenly
serious. "The stakes are required to be high, Ms. Hunter. NASA must
realize this is not a game." He punctuated his words by jabbing a slender
finger in her direction. "I needed to establish that at the outset, so my
demands will be heard with due consideration."
He handed her one of
the telephones. "However, you have made a good suggestion. Before we cut
off the outside phone lines, if you would be so kind as to contact NASA
Security, perhaps you could prevent further loss of life if they agree to back
off."
Nicole hesitated.
What else could she do? Phillips lifted an eyebrow as she raced over the
options in her mind . . . The little man had the upper hand. She took the
phone, desperate to salvage the situation. Her hands were sweaty. "What do
you want me to say?" She felt defeated.
"Just tell them
to restrain themselves, stay out of the restricted area. I also know about
NASA's roving security patrols around the swamps, so tell them to sit tight and
keep away from the Launch Control Center. My people are infiltrated throughout
the site, as you've just seen. I call the shots here, no pun intended, and
Security will have to sit on their hands until they receive further
instructions from me."
Nicole's mind
whirled, trying to focus. Her thoughts threatened to cascade over into
panic—but she fought the confusion down. She had to handle this situation
delicately, pretend it was one of the crash simulator routines in which Iceberg
had always excelled. This would be the crisis of her career, and there were
numerous lives at stake, as Mr. Phillips had so clearly demonstrated.
The sooty stain in
the sky from the helicopter explosion dissipated, but its memory would leave a
scar in her mind forever.
She gripped the phone and made the call.
Beside her, Mr.
Phillips flipped through the pages of the Wall Street Journal Senator
Boorman's aide had left on the table. Flicking frequent glances at Nicole and
the other hostages, he scanned down the tiny print on the stock pages, scowling
distastefully.
Struggling out of his
chair, Senator Boorman cleared his throat, as if he considered it part of the
process of making any sort of important speech.
Mr. Phillips turned
to him and brightened. "Ah yes, Senator, I believe it's time we had a
talk. As chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, you must be very
well connected with powerful people. I may need your assistance to negotiate my
demands."
The senator scowled.
"Cooperation wasn't exactly on my mind, sir."
"It's in your
own best interests to resolve this situation."
Boorman grudgingly
nodded. "If that's the best way out of this mess."
Mr. Phillips looked
thoughtfully at him. "How heroic, Senator," he said. "Just what
I expected of you. We'll see to you later, though. I haven't yet even made my
demands."
Nicole looked up
sharply from the phone. "Let's get on with it before anyone else
dies."
"Don't rush me,
Ms. Hunter. It's my fifteen minutes of fame," he said simply. He rubbed
his upper lip again. "I'm going to bask in it."
17
ICEBERG HAD HOBBLED TO within a half mile of the guard shack-still keeping a low
profile, miserably wondering the best way he could surrender to minimize the
problems for Salvador—when the NASA helicopter exploded overhead. A ball of
fire roiled in the air the sound of the blast came like a thunderclap.
Iceberg dropped to the muddy, weedy ground, heedless of his cast and the sharp increase of pain that shot from his toes to his knee "Holy shit!"
Swallowed by the
weeds, he frantically looked around, scanning the sky. The fireball diffused
into a low red glow, but the detonation had left a purple afterimage in his
sight. Burning debris fell from the air, raining down on the thick vegetation,
and a dull quietness hung over the swamps as heavy as the humidity.
He was sure he'd seen
the curving trail of a ground-launched missile just before the
explosion.
"Chill out,
cool, frosty . . ." he muttered, hoping the repeated words might calm him.
"Now, more than ever." He dug his hands in the soft dirt while lying
still, trying to make sense of what he had witnessed. It was some sort of IR
missile, launched on the ground and guided by an infrared sensor.
Years ago as part of
his Air Force training, he had brought down an unmanned target drone with an IR
missile, but at the time he had been strapped in an F-15 and flying over the
Gulf of Mexico, safely shooting on a test range. This was friggin' serious. Iceberg
dismissed any notion of the NASA security detail looking for him. Something
else was going on, and he had blundered smack into the middle of it.
Without raising his
head, Iceberg shrugged off his daypack. He fumbled through the canvas bag and
pulled out the Walkman TV. The network reporters from the press stands
broadcast long-range shots of the exploding helicopter and jabbered about some
other SWAT operation over at the LCC building, but nobody seemed to know
anything.
Here, inside the
guard gates, Iceberg sure as hell wasn't going to hide like a field mouse, not
with his friend Salvador possibly in danger, not with his crew out there on Atlantis
. . . and not with Panther in the Launch Control Center. Although he was
still an active-duty Colonel in the USAF, it had been years since he'd
participated in war exercises. As an astronaut, he lived in a different world
entirely. He wasn't sure he was ready for this.
Well, he'd just have
to refresh his memory.
Iceberg crawled
toward the guard shack and made a hundred yards before he reassessed the
situation. His foot hurt like a son of a bitch, but after the destroyed copter,
NASA Security might shoot first and ask questions later. He had to be slick and
quiet, a snake in the grass until he knew what was going on.
He kept in the lee of
the small dunes, crouching beneath and behind the thick underbrush, Georgia
pines, tangled creepers intent on breaking his other foot. His clumsily rushed
evasion tactics weren't good enough to thwart a full-fledged search, but at least he wasn't
calling attention to himself.
Still hidden, Iceberg
came to an abrupt halt, astonished. Down the road from the guard shack,
black-and-white smoke rolled up into the sky from three motionless security
ATVs. One rested on its side, where it had blown up. Bodies of the security
team lay sprawled half out of the vehicles; bullet holes looked like starbursts
on the black ATVs. The men and women had been mowed down, a total slaughter.
He listened,
straining for the sounds of sirens, but he heard nothing. No rescue vehicles, no
backup troops. Everything was too damned quiet!
He started crawling
forward again, his inner alarm bells ringing. Far ahead, he saw a lone figure step out of the
small, metal-walled shack. At least Salvador
would be able to tell him what was going on. . .
Iceberg rose,
intending to wave, when he noticed that this rangy man was smaller and thinner
than the old guard's tall figure. The stranger wore the uniform of a NASA
security guard, but he made no move toward the scattered bodies, the smoldering
ATV wreckage. He took a long drag from a cigarette, then walked around the
shack by the off-road motorbike, kneeling to inspect some wires in the grass.
He reminded Iceberg of a Doberman on patrol in an equipment yard.
Iceberg dug out his
small field glasses, straining to see what the man was doing. He had intended
to use the little binoculars to watch the shuttle lift off, to see the solid
rocket boosters ignite—now he watched a terrorist's preparations instead.
The strange guard
looked small and shifty, out of place, with long hair tied back in a ponytail.
He tucked down the collar of his security uniform. Iceberg turned the focusing
knob until he spotted cables running from the man's position to a battery of. .
. rifles mounted on tripods?
Iceberg discerned a
dark clump propped against the back of the hut. He swung his binoculars over
toward the weeds and squinted. With a sharp intake of breath, he recognized
Salvador. The old guard's head hung on his chest at an unnatural angle, as if
he had been carelessly dumped there.
The impostor guard
seemed satisfied with the cable connections. He surveyed the area again, then
flicked the butt of his cigarette off into the long grass. He lit up another
one, then sat down casually in the colorful folding lawn chair, holding an
assault rifle, waiting.
18
SITTING IN AN ARMORED Personnel Carrier a mile away from the launchpad was the
ultimate job for a firefighter. The APC's heavy armor would shield the
two-person crew from the ignition blast or unexpected debris; the top hatch was
required to be closed during the countdown ever since, contrary to NASA
regulations, one crew had been caught sitting exposed on top of their armored
vehicle gawking at the launch.
If something went
wrong with the shuttle before it lifted from the pad, the astronauts would try to
escape. As the crew rode emergency baskets down the long escape wires, the APC
would roar toward the terminus to pick them up. The astronauts could hole up in
fortified bunkers, but if the danger was great enough, and if the firefighters
had time, the astronauts could scramble inside the APC and rumble away in
relative safety. Standard emergency procedures, frequently reviewed, but
hopefully never required.
The two-person rescue
crew sat inside their vehicle, routinely ready but not expecting problems. In
all previous launches, the APC had roared into action only once—when a computer
glitch had shut down the shuttle main engines after ignition, but before the
solid rocket boosters had lit. In that instance, the emergency procedures had
worked perfectly, as expected.
So when the sirens
blared, distant gunshots rang out, and the helicopter exploded overhead, the
rescue crew was justifiably startled.
The APC commander
grabbed her radio. "Launch Control, APC here. I'm picking up sirens, and
we've detected an explosion. Is there a problem? Should we evacuate the
crew?"
Launch Control
sounded tense. "Negative, APC. This is part of a, uh, planned exercise. No
further data at this time."
"Planned
exercise? We haven't been notified! A helicopter just exploded!"
"I say again,
keep on hold, APC. Take no action. Control out." The commander frowned and
picked up her checklist, then tossed it aside in disgust. She unbuckled from
her seat.
"How can they
have a planned exercise without reading us into it?" Her crewman turned as
she struggled to stand in the cramped compartment. The adjoining compartment
had enough room to hold the astronauts, but the command alcove was jammed with
radios, computer screens, and high-tech video systems.
The APC commander
started to undo the upper hatch. "I'm going to take a look-see. 'Take no
action'—give me a break!"
"But the
checklist—"
The commander ignored
her partner as she swung the hatch up with a grunt. The muggy air mixed with
the metallic, air-conditioned clamminess of the vehicle. She pushed her
shoulders out to look around.
She never felt the
bullet take off the back of her head.
Jacques shot the bitch between the eyes before she had a chance to
cry out. Moments earlier he'd been wondering how he would get the rescue team
to open the APC hatch—but they'd done so without even being asked.
"Merci" he
said.
As the bitch slumped
down, he shoved her body back inside and clambered on top of the opening. A
frightened voice squawked from within the APC.
Jacques bent down
into the armored vehicle, knocking the corpse aside. A helmeted head turned
toward him, and Jacques saw a young man, quite good-looking. Too bad to have to
waste good meat. The crewman tried to disentangle himself from his commander's
bloodied body that had toppled onto him, and groped for his side arm.
Jacques pumped two
quick shots into the young man's chest. He hoped the bullets wouldn't rattle
around the closed compartment, where a ricochet might damage the equipment. The
young man gurgled and tried to catch himself, sliding down onto the metal
floor.
Jacques leaned back
out of the APC, turned around, and descended the ladder into the vehicle.
Pulling his small tool kit inside, he closed the hatch.
He picked up the dead
crewman by his shoulders and dragged him to the adjoining compartment meant to
carry rescued astronauts. He ran a hand over the young man's cheek, now lolling
against the chest. Such nice, soft skin . . .
Straightening, he
pulled the bitch's body by an arm and tossed her on top of the young man, out
of his way.
Now, to assess the
situation. He took a moment to familiarize himself with the APC
instrumentation, smearing blood away from one digital readout; the interior of
the vehicle looked like a wall-to-wall videogame. Everything was in place, just
as Mr. Phillips had promised. Good. Jacques fumbled in his pants and pulled out
a portable beeper and pushed the button several times, sending the next
expected signal.
He squatted, opening
his tool kit to reveal a jumble of metal parts. Working patiently and
methodically, he assembled a 7.62-mm FR-G2 high-powered sniper's rifle. After
wiping the barrel with a cloth, he carefully attached a laser bore sighter to
zero in the rifle. It took a few precious minutes, but it was worth it for the
increase in accuracy. He'd wait here, a mole in their safety net, as the
rifle's eight-hundred-meter range was well within the astronauts' terminus
point.
No one would suspect
a thing.
19
MR. PHILLIPS USED A pocket mirror that he had borrowed at gunpoint, from one of
Senator Boorman's aides He stroked his eyebrows with a fingertip, then
took his comb to straighten his hair. He wanted to be sure he made a good first
impression.
He brushed the front
of his suit jacket, dismayed at the rumpled quality it had acquired from his
exertion in the humid air outside. Now in the heavily air-conditioned LCC, he
felt uncomfortably clammy He hadn't
planned to perspire so much. The careful organization of his entire scheme
should have allowed him to pull it off without breaking into a sweat—but he had
to be flexible.
"Very
well," Mr. Phillips said and handed the mirror back to the terrified aide.
"Thank you." When she seemed afraid to retrieve it, he snapped,
"I don't have all day!" Like a skittish rodent she grabbed the mirror
and tucked it back into her purse. Mr. Phillips regained his composure and
turned to Rusty. "How do I look?"
"Definitely
ready for TV, Mr. Phillips," the redhead said with a grin.
"Just as I
thought." He pulled out the short step stool one of the LCC workers had
retrieved from an office down the hall and climbed up to stand an additional
foot taller. "The camera never knows the illusion," he said sotto
voce. He smiled self-deprecatingly at the hostages, then popped another breath
mint in his mouth.
Andrei Trovkin glared
coldly, furious at him, as he expected; Senator Boorman held his mouth tight,
as if he were trying to figure out how to cut a deal somehow.
The Launch Director
herself seemed a mass of conflicting impulses. Most of the archival pictures he
had seen of Nicole Hunter had been taken during astronaut training events, and
she looked quite different now in her navy suit and pants, white silk shirt, delicate
gold necklace. He knew from his research that she had been one of the VIP
observers at the Ariane explosion in French Guiana, so when he announced his
own connection to that spectacular explosion, she would be well aware of what
he could accomplish. It would be quite amusing to watch her reaction.
Down the half flight
of stairs Yvette paced in front of the badge-locked door to the main firing
floor, keeping the stymied engineers at their stations, not knowing what to do
with the launch countdown on hold.
Mr. Phillips stood on
the step stool and peered around, running his well-rehearsed speech over in his
head. Rusty's stock videotape of old shuttle-launch footage would soon run out
in the TV relay bunker, letting the NASA televisions see the real Atlantis again
now that his team had secured their objective. If the government would just
accede to his demands, everybody could live happily ever after.
"Show time!
Cameras on me, please," he said to the captive reporters. "I have the
announcement you've all been waiting for." He whispered conspiratorially
over at Nicole. "I'm a little nervous, so wish me luck."
"You'll need
it," she said with an edge to her voice.
One of the cameramen
panned around the VIP deck, focusing on the
nervous expressions of the hostages. Mr. Phillips
clapped his hands like a gunshot. "I said cameras on me\ Rusty, if
you could provide a reminder the next time anyone diverts their attention from
the real story?"
"Definitely, Mr.
Phillips," Rusty said, and waved his pistol around. Mr. Phillips sniffed
at the wayward cameraman. "Mr. Channel Seven—make sure
you get the focus right. This is real news for once in your life."
Embarrassed and angered, the reporter ducked behind his video cam.
"Good morning,
and thank you for your attention," Mr. Phillips began. It wasn't the
Gettysburg Address, but he had worked hard on the speech. "You may call me
Mr. Phillips, since we are about to enter into business dealings.
"The space
shuttle is mankind's flagship into space, our vehicle to take us to the future.
But some of you have forgotten how precious, how complex . . . how expensive
our shuttle is. Many have grown bored with the near-flawless performance of
this marvel of technology. Today, the American people must decide how much it
is worth to them.
"Because I
believe the space shuttle is so precious, I'm going to sell you its safety. My
colleagues and I have planted explosives on Atlantis, and if you agree
to pay my very reasonable price, I will not blow it up." He smiled
sweetly for the camera.
"My team has
secured the entire area around the launchpad for the purpose of these
negotiations. We have already demonstrated our resolve in numerous ways, as
NASA can attest.
"This"—he held
up a small remote control device—"will detonate the explosives, if I so
choose. I know numbers are tiresome, but let me explain that there are over a
million pounds of propellant in each of Atlantis's two solid rocket
boosters, plus one point six million pounds of liquid hydrogen and oxygen in
the external tank. Enough to make quite an explosion.
"We all recall
the Challenger disaster. Another such occurrence— especially a
preventable one—would be a devastating blow to American prestige, not to mention
the loss of the brave astronauts who are even now waiting in the shuttle
pending the outcome of our discussions. I'm sure my hostages here at the Launch
Control Center would be equally disappointed. I'll ask the cameras to pan
across our distinguished visitors, so you can see the guests I have with
me."
Rusty prodded the cameraman, who turned his video cam on Nicole, Trovkin, and Senator Boorman. They looked grim-faced into the lens.
"The problem
with gold, or even paper money, is that it tends to get very heavy in large
quantities, and I am unfortunately limited to the amount I'm able to carry
conveniently. I must get the most value per pound of ransom," Mr. Phillips
continued. "Therefore, I'm asking for a single sturdy briefcase, dimensions
not smaller than twenty inches wide by fourteen inches tall by four inches
thick, stuffed chock full of diamonds and other precious gems. Rubies,
emeralds, sapphires . . . oh, and I have a particular fondness for alexandrite.
Each gem in an individual packet marked with carat, color, and clarity, the way
they come at diamond wholesalers. No gems smaller than one carat, please, and
no larger than two. Decent quality stones, of course."
He knew that
world-class gems were frequently traceable, and that their true worth would be
severely devalued when he had to sell them through various black-market
outlets, but he had no doubt he could still turn a decent profit. Gems he could
liquidate for ready cash anywhere in the world, while Swiss bank accounts did
not always remain secret. Besides, after the debacle he had personally
witnessed on Wall Street, he wanted nothing more to do with electronic
transfers of funds.
"I have a loupe,
a Mohs' scale, and gemology expertise, so don't play games with me. I intend to
select fifty stones at random and test them for authenticity. If I find any
fakes—and I will find them—then I would have no choice but to void our
transaction." He frowned sternly.
"While it's
impossible for me to assign an exact dollar amount for such a suitcase full of
gems, you'll realize that the price is quite a bargain, regardless. The
replacement cost of a new spacecraft is close to two billion dollars, not to
mention the amount of time it would take, since our country has foolishly mothballed
the production facilities for additional orbiters."
Mr. Phillips folded
his hands in front of him. "These are my terms: You have four hours for
the suitcase to be delivered here, along with a rescue helicopter for myself
and my team; then we will be on our way. If everything goes smoothly, Atlantis
can even blast off tomorrow to meet its launch schedule with the Mir station."
"How do we know
you're not bluffing?" Senator Boorman said.
Rusty swung the heavy
handgun directly at the senator, who turned gray and held his big hands up in
surrender. The cameraman from channel 7 wavered the lens toward Boorman, then
remembered Mr. Phillips's threat and swung the focus back to where it was.
"Excuse me,
Senator, but I have not yet yielded the floor." He frowned. "However,
since I've been so rudely interrupted—by a man who should know better, being
thoroughly familiar with Roberts Rules of Order—if you check your records you
will find that an unmanned Chinese Long March rocket was destroyed at its
launch complex eleven months ago. We were responsible for that. Also, we
exploded an Ariane 44L rocket in Kourou, French Guiana, some six months ago,
and can offer proof." He held up the remote. "Don't make us prove our
skills again, please." From her seat, Nicole Hunter looked at him in
amazement. "The Ariane! You did—" Then she cut herself off, as if to
deny him the pleasure of her surprise.
He reached into the
front pocket of his suit and removed the mission patch he had taken from the
hapless security guard where Duncan now held the perimeter. He tossed it on the
counter and gestured toward it.
"Focus in on
this," he said quickly and quietly. The cameras crowded closer. The new
mission patch, not yet released to anyone but the astronauts themselves, showed
a colorful design collaboratively chosen by the Russian and American crew—an
eagle and bear reaching toward the stars. Mr. Phillips waited a moment as the
cameras zoomed in on the original three astronaut names written across the top:
FRIESE, GREEN, BURNS; the other four names were written on the bottom.
"The choice is
yours," Mr. Phillips said. "Do you want to lose a two-billion-dollar
spacecraft, as well as the lives of seven heroic astronauts, for the sake of a
few shiny rocks?" He pulled out his pocket watch, flipped it open, and
paused for effect. "You have four hours. Please don't make me destroy this
marvel of engineering. Thank you for your time."
He smiled. "I
now return you to your regularly scheduled programming."
20
ICEBERG DUCKED OUT OF sight of the impostor guard, the man who had murdered
Salvador. He drew in several breaths, trying to clear his head, but his pulse
wouldn't slow.
Armored ATVs blown up, a whole NASA security team wiped out, a
helicopter detonated in midair. And his friend the old guard was dead! The
bastards. Iceberg drew in several more breaths, trying to stay calm, to keep
his hands from shaking in rage.
Cool.
Frosty
It had always sounded
good before, but now he had to put it into practice.
Okay, he thought.
What to do? He switched his priorities from finding out what was going on to
just trying to survive. But no way was he going to hide under a bush until
someone else took care of the problem. The SERE training he'd taken at the USAF
Academy sure as hell hadn't covered this—but it had taught him to react.
The leathery-faced sergeant who had instructed the cadets had insisted that
these techniques were applicable in a wide variety of situations. Time to prove
it.
Iceberg tried to
restore his cold facade while going over the options. Think! He had to find out
for certain if Salvador was really dead, or if the old man needed medical
attention . . . and he sure couldn't waltz up to the shack and take the motionless guard's pulse.
But earlier this
morning he had scrambled to within a mile of the launchpad without being
detected by NASA's most sophisticated sensors; sneaking
close to one guy at a guard shack should be a Cakewalk by comparison.
Iceberg scooted on
his hands and knees across the thick weeds and vines, careful to avoid bumping
his foot cast. The mosquitoes found him easily; small animals rustled through
the underbrush. He just hoped he didn't spook a snoozing alligator.
Iceberg counted off paces as he moved.
Every time he reached a hundred, he peeked over a small rise or peered between
bushes to check his progress. The impostor guard sat in his lawn chair, arms
crossed over his chest as he surveyed the carnage, a thin smile on his face.
The man stretched, then got up and went back inside the shack to watch his TV
monitor.
Iceberg ducked and
continued moving. Slide and scoot, keeping his tender foot protected, careful
not to make any noise. It infuriated him that he couldn't just rush to the
shack and see if he could help Salvador.
He lost count of the
minutes, but finally Iceberg found himself within twenty yards. He saw little
or no cover on three sides of the shack and the road—only short, scrubby grass
and sandy-muddy dirt torn up in patches from the nocturnal rootings of the
prevalent wild pigs.
He rose to a crouch
and starting jogging through the tall weeds as fast as his broken foot and its
dragging cast would allow him, gaining momentum in a strange, hippity-hop
stride. He hid, panting, beside the three-wheeled vehicle Salvador had used to
patrol the KSC backroads.
Inside the shack,
with his back turned, the ponytailed thug rocked back in his chair as he
watched the TV monitors. The image of Atlantis filled one of the screens
while Nicole Hunter and Senator Boorman showed on another. Even with the quick
glance he got, Iceberg could tell Nicole looked visibly upset.
Iceberg crept around
the side of the hut. His heart yammered, his hands grew slick with sweat. The
sounds from the TV were louder now. The thug laughed at something on the
broadcast, then tossed a cigarette butt out the door of the shack.
Finally reaching
Salvador's slumped form discarded like a piece of garbage, Iceberg found that
the old guard's chest didn't move at all, and his head lolled at an impossible
angle, as if his neck had been snapped. Dead—no question about it.
Iceberg felt his
anger mount. With an icy determination hardening in his gut, he quietly patted
down Salvador's body but found no weapon. The impostor guard must have stripped
the old guard of his gun.
Inside the shack, the
thug stood up. He turned down the sound on the TV, stepping cautiously outside.
Iceberg cursed,
having lost his element of surprise without even developing a plan of attack.
He desperately wished he had some sort of weapon, anything. He flexed his
hands, knowing he'd run out of time.
The long-haired
impostor popped around the corner of the shack, Salvador's pistol drawn.
"Gotcha, mate!"
Iceberg plunged into
the leafy underbrush to one side of the guard shack, ducking, tearing vines out
of the way. He stumbled on weeds and interlocked bushes that smacked against
the hard shell of his cast and its protective moon boot.
"Yo!" the
impostor shouted. "Bad idea." With sharp cracks, he began firing his
pistol. Iceberg watched a branch splinter less than a foot away from his head;
another bright tan gouge suddenly appeared on the trunk of a pine. He ducked
and weaved, Escape and Evasion, unable to traverse a straight path through the
swamp forest even if he had wanted to. The thick underbrush and his broken foot
prevented him from moving quickly.
Iceberg dropped to
his hands and knees, making progress through the thicket toward the road where
the wrecked NASA security vehicles lay. If he could just manage to get there,
take brief shelter behind the ruined ATVs, he could find a weapon inside, even if he had to tear
it from the hands of dead NASA security personnel. At least he'd be able to
shoot back.
The impostor fired
again, and a bullet tore through the weeds behind him. He had gotten ahead of
where the long-haired man thought he was.
Iceberg finally
reached a spot even with the nearest smoldering ATV, but he would have to cross
at least fifteen feet of open terrain to get to the vehicle. He'd be a sitting
duck if he tried to cross the clearing.
No more wasted time
thinking about possibilities. He had to make a run for it. Three, two, one .
. . go!
Instinctively, he
wanted to give a battle yell, but Iceberg clamped his lips shut. Silence might
gain him an instant more time. He charged out of the underbrush straight toward
the vehicles. His foot screamed in pain, but he told it to shut up. Cover,
shelter . . . weapons.
The impostor spun
toward him, running full out, cursing and trying to aim his pistol.
Iceberg put on extra
speed with his strange, lurching gait. His foot felt as if a bear trap had just
closed about it.
The impostor shot once. The bullet grazed
past him, just missing. That was too close.
Iceberg saw another
glint of metal out of the corner of his left eye, the dark blue steel of three
rifle barrels. In the bushes next to the road he saw the unattended weapons
mounted on tripods, automatic assault rifles. And tripwires.
"Holy
shit!" he cried, then spun about, diving to the ground in the opposite
direction. Iceberg skidded across the scrubby grass just as the automatic
weapons fire spat out, criss-crossing the air where he had just stood.
Now he lay out in the
open, in the middle of the grassy clearing, with no shelter in sight.
The impostor ran
forward, his pistol waving. "You're making this too easy for me,
mate!"
Iceberg covered his
head with his hands, squeezing his eyes shut, trying to sink into the ground.
He couldn't just lie here and be shot. He'd have to run, crawl, do anything.
But there was no cover, no weapons, no way in hell of surviving. . . .
The next sound was a boom
as loud as a cannon shot.
Chunks of turf and
dirt rained around him, and Iceberg looked up to see a dissipating explosion,
as if a small volcano had erupted out of the
ground. He saw no sign of the long-haired impostor,
only a crater in the grass. The mud pattering all around had a decidedly
reddish tinge.
A land mine! The thug had stepped on one of his own land mines!
Iceberg got to his hands and knees, stunned and disbelieving.
Iceberg stood up on
shaky legs, looked around him at the rough grass, the patches of muddy dirt,
the numerous gouges that he had thought were caused by the common wild boars .
. . but now might simply be the marks of buried land mines.
Buried explosives all
around.
Swallowing in his dry
throat, Iceberg very gingerly made his way back to the guard shack. . . Of
course, the impostor guard's gun had also been blasted somewhere, lost in the
underbrush . . . even if it did remain serviceable. He needed a weapon, but he
had no intention of prodding around in a minefield looking for it.
Finally reaching the
shack, he felt as if he had participated in a marathon gymnastics meet back at
the Academy in Colorado Springs. Still gasping for breath, he straightened
Salvador's chair and flopped down, barely keeping himself from passing out. His
foot throbbed like a pile driver.
From the small
building he had an unobstructed view of Phillips Highway, the north-south road
coming in from Cape Canaveral, as well as the east-west access road. The
terrorists must have considered it a good place to set up an ambush. Smoke
still rose from the shot-up and burning security ATVs.
Panting, he glanced
around the shack. Everything on the monitors looked serene, no movement.
But the main screen
showed some smartass effete twerp. Iceberg caught his name as Phillips. As he
listened, it dawned on Iceberg that the space shuttle was being held for
ransom. Atlantis—his crew! That's what all this was about.
Iceberg felt as if a
ton of gravel had been poured on him. The smoking ruins of the security ATVs,
the downed helicopter, and Salvador's murder confirmed that these people were
not jokers. Whoever the slimeballs were, they held the upper hand.
For now.
The dapper man
disappeared from the TV, leaving a shot of Nicole, Ambassador Trovkin, and
Senator Boorman. They all looked worried.
Mr. Phillips returned
and threw something onto a counter; the camera focused on a crew patch—and on
the names FRIESE, GREEN, BURNS embroidered at the top. It was the patch Iceberg
had given Salvador that morning.
He felt his face grow
red, pissed off beyond words. He glared at the monitor. Mr. Phillips looked as
if he were speaking directly to Iceberg, taunting him. Iceberg turned up the
volume.
"—four hours.
Please don't make me destroy this marvel of engineering. . ."
After the little man
finished his speech, the radio on the counter sputtered. "We've got NASA
on the run. All sites please check in."
He recognized the
voice he had heard on TV!
Clipped voices came
over the radio. Mr. Phillips's voice acknowledged them, until he repeated
something about a guard shack—then it hit Iceberg that the voice was talking to
him. He felt a sudden chill. If he didn't answer, they would know
something had happened to the fake guard.
Mr. Phillips's voice
came again, this time with an edge to it. "Duncan? Are you still at the
guard shack? Check in."
Iceberg picked up the
microphone and clicked it twice. The international signal for "okay."
That seemed to satisfy Phillips and the radio fell silent. He slumped back
against Salvador's old desk. "Chill, chill, chill," he said. He ran a
hand through his short dark hair. "Have I just given this Phillips guy a
green light?"
He picked up the telephone
in the shack, but the line was dead. The impostor had smashed all of Salvador's
radio equipment. Aside from the fixed-frequency walkie-talkie that was tuned to
Phillips alone, Iceberg had no communications gear at all.
Which meant no one
knew he was out here. Including Mr. Phillips. He felt sick to his stomach.
Phillips had NASA over a barrel. Iceberg wasn't sure what he could do, but he
had to do something.
He could never let
Gator Green and the rest of his crew on Atlantis wait for bureaucrats to
negotiate the hostage situation. Knowing this Administration, they'd be more
concerned about being politically correct than stopping the terrorists. Iceberg
had to take matters into his own hands. It might be the only way to save his
crew.
Part of him realized it might be the only
way to save Panther, as well.
21
ICEBERG YELPED AS HE forgot himself and put his full weight on his left foot. He hopped
up and grabbed his heavy cast, drawing a breath through his teeth. "Can't
let that happen again." He had more important things to worry about, like
a bunch of terrorists.
But what should he
do? He gripped the door frame of the guard shack. Phillips had finished his
tirade on the television, and now commentators excitedly chattered about what
it all meant. Iceberg tried to think calmly,
get hold of his senses. He swung into
"checklist" mode, that detached state where he put his body into
autopilot while his mind raced ahead.
He took a long, full
breath. He had to think clearly, plan every move, be calm. Frosty.
He had to get through
to NASA Security, let them know that this strategic point was no longer held by
the bad guys. A sufficient force could easily pass through the gate.
But what would that
accomplish? The shack was miles from the Launch Control Center as well as the
launchpad. If Phillips really did have his people stationed throughout the
restricted area, then it would do no good for security to show up here. They'd
just provoke Phillips to push the button. The counterstrike would have to be
more subtle than that, quieter—something a single man could accomplish.
NASA should have been
able to control the TV relay bunker, cutting off the little twerp's
grandstanding. A chill ran through Iceberg. Amos. Was he okay? What if
his little brother's bunker had been overrun like Salvador's guard shack?
Then Iceberg
remembered that the bunker was protected well enough to withstand a direct
explosion: thick walled, reinforced,
one of the old blast observation shelters from the Apollo launches. Since the
communications lines were still open, Amos must be all right. Maybe Phillips
had insisted on making a televised speech. Terrorists loved to hear themselves
talk.
Meanwhile, Iceberg's
crew were trapped as hostages on board Atlantis, sitting ducks on the
launchpad. Knowing NASA bureaucracy, they were probably given no reason and
thought they were waiting on an indefinite hold—and all the while they were
pawns for a ridiculous ransom.
Maybe if Iceberg
could get in touch with Gator Green directly, he could convince the crew to
exit the shuttle, take cover in the emergency bunkers. That would remove one of
Phillips's major bargaining chips.
The thought of
getting the crew out of danger—his crew—gave Iceberg a renewed sense of
hope, and a motivation that he could somehow strike back. He couldn't ask for
more.
Dragging his cast, he
limped behind the shack to where the three-wheeled all-terrain buggy had been
parked. He set his mouth at the sight of Salvador's body, slumped against the
back wall. Iceberg knew the space program had been the old man's life; every
memento in the small shack reflected Salvador's enthusiasm for NASA—the shuttle
patches, a picture of Salvador and his wife with the crew of Apollo 10.
Reverently, feeling
queasy in his stomach, Iceberg hauled the old guard into the shack and laid him
on the floor. Panting, breaking into a sweat from the pain and his own grief,
Iceberg straightened Salvador, then reached up to turn off the TV monitor,
which continued to replay "news analysis" and sound bites. "No
need for you to have to listen to that garbage."
One of the news
broadcasts replayed the ransom demand while hastily conscripted
"experts" discussed other hostage crises. Like Nicole, everybody
wanted to talk the situation to death. But that was typical nowadays—they'd
rather flash a Vu-graph showing the possibilities than make a commitment. At
least Iceberg intended to do something.
Limping, he grabbed
his daypack and thought again about obtaining a weapon, but he didn't dare risk
running the gauntlet of buried land mines to reach the tripod-mounted rifles,
which were themselves wired to motion sensors. He'd look mighty stupid if he
got himself mowed down with nobody else around to shoot at him.
No, he wasn't
planning to get into a shootout. He was just going to make a call to the
shuttle cockpit. Next procedure, just like going through a
"Dash-One." One thing at a time on the checklist.
He limped around back
to the small three-wheeler. With its fat balloon tires and putt-putt engine,
the little ATV was the only way he could get around fast enough to make a
difference. He'd have to chuck the E and E'ing, and hope that Mr. Phillips had
only enough people to cover critical points around the restricted area. No one
expected Iceberg to be here, already inside.
Iceberg climbed on
the three-wheeled buggy, gingerly lifting his cast and it's now muddy covering
over the seat, and pushed the starter. He revved the flat-sounding engine that
sent up blue-white coils of exhaust. He knew of one other place inside the
restricted area that had the necessary radio equipment to contact his crew,
another place that should have been cleared of personnel for the launch.
Spinning the fat
tires, he made off overland for the towering Vehicle Assembly Building, a good
three miles away.
The ride was bumpy,
but no more so than the off-road biking he'd done at the sand dunes south of
here during the early months of astronaut training, him and Nicole on the
weekends, blazing their own trails, exploring. Their relationship had crashed
and burned, but at least Iceberg knew the terrain of the KSC and its
surrounding Merritt Island National Wildlife Sanctuary.
The Vehicle Assembly Building loomed larger
as he sped for the massive squarish structure. Heading west, he couldn't see
the multistory American flag painted on the front; it dwarfed everything
around, and beside it was the red-white-and-blue rounded star of the
Bicentennial symbol.
From his perspective,
the VAB looked like a huge white monument, jutting up alone in the swamplands.
It towered high above the flat terrain like a giant's building block on the
edge of the wide and sluggish Banana Creek, which was used as a turn basin for
barges bearing the shuttle's external fuel tanks. Parallel tracks of
multilayered gravel formed the crawlerway, the straight path used to haul the
massive launch-prepped orbiters from the VAB out to the pad.
Coming in overland,
Iceberg flew from the soft, weed-covered ground onto the concrete parking lot.
Iceberg headed for the half-open giant hangar doors that could raise up in
sections and slide sideways to allow rocket assemblies to emerge on slow-moving
crawler vehicles. The sound of his vehicle puttered like shots from a toy
machine gun, but he saw no indication of anyone around to hear him.
He shut the buggy's
engine down, then swung off the padded seat, grabbing his pack. He hobbled
across the concrete apron toward the cool, shadowy interior of the VAB, a mouse
entering a hole in the wall.
The inside of the
building was as voluminous as five Empire State Buildings. It echoed like a
giant man-made cave as he stepped inside. Metal-gray structures meshed with the
cement floor. A forklift at the other end of the building looked like a toy in
the distance. The ceiling yawned nearly two hundred feet above him, and the
opposite wall was a football field away. If he looked up, he would get dizzy
from the myriad catwalks incredibly high above. Iceberg had heard engineers say
that clouds sometimes formed at the top of the stratospheric high bay.
Two solid rocket
motor engines hung in a preparation carriage, mounted to the tall structure of
the Mobile Launcher Platform, ready to be mated to the next shuttle due to come
into the assembly bay. The previous orbiter, Endeavour, had recently
completed its long, slow journey out to launchpad 39B, scheduled for launch not
long after Atlantis. Already the VAB was prepped for the next orbiter, Discovery,
currently undergoing reconditioning in the Orbiter Processing Facility.
Business as usual
at America's Spaceport, he thought. But a lot of things would change after
today.
With his limping jog,
Iceberg quickly reached the downstairs command post at the side of the VAB high
bay, an office that served as a checkpoint for all shuttle moving operations.
The glass door was
locked. Great. At least they didn't have alarms rigged to these internal
offices.
He spotted a rack of tools fastened to the
wall, each item marked with a code-locator number. He unlatched a long wrench,
painted sky-blue for easy finding, and returned to the glass door. Turning his
head, he smashed the window out just above the handle, then reached in to open
the door from the inside.
Transparent walls
around the room gave supervisors an unobstructed view of all shuttle assembly
activities inside the bay. The desk held two phones, a radio, check sheet,
clipboards, and a stained coffee cup that looked as if it hadn't been washed
since Apollo-Soyuz.
As he entered the
office, Iceberg saw a radio. Switching it on, Iceberg tuned to the main shuttle
comm frequency. Gator's voice came over the speaker, querying about the
extended countdown hold and receiving only a double-talk answer.
With a sigh of
relief, Iceberg swung a swivel chair around and slumped down, grateful to take
weight off his foot. He could count on Gator Green, his best friend and the
best damned pilot he had ever known—next to himself, of course.
When the Atlantis crew
had flown from Houston cross-country to KSC, two per aircraft, Gator had
piloted while Iceberg rode behind him in the backseat of the T-38. The crew had
roared eastward in a dawn flight to arrive in Florida at mid-morning, landing
their four jets on the sparkling runway.
During the flight,
the two friends had a chance for plenty of conversation, lightweight banter,
and cautious questions until Gator finally asked him about Panther, how she had
left the astronaut corps to be a desk jockey. Iceberg had been bitter, while
Gator had been quite understanding, even defending Nicole—but then Gator never
managed to speak ill of anyone. Iceberg had shut down his own emotions,
refusing to understand Nicole's point of view, preferring his own explanations.
The jets had touched
down, taxiing forward to meet the small group of news representatives, NASA
Security with explosives-sniffing dogs snooping around the news vans, and a few
cheering family members and supporters. It seemed to Iceberg a pitifully small
crowd. He and the Atlantis crew gathered around a microphone for the
standard-issue rah-rah speech, then marched off to crew debriefing and, later,
isolation in prep for the launch several weeks away.
Iceberg remembered
that newly appointed Launch Director Nicole Hunter had been in the crowd that
day, standing quietly in the back, making no statements and refusing to meet
his eye.
Now, in the VAB,
Iceberg thought briefly about trying to get hold of Nicole directly. But she
was a hostage in Launch Control, and he couldn't afford to let the terrorists
know what was going on. She would just have to trust his instincts.
Picking up the
microphone, he punched in one of the private frequencies from memory. No way
did he intend to let Phillips know he was out here by using the main comm
channel. "Gator, Iceberg. Do you read?" He waited a moment. Nothing.
He tried again. "Gator, Iceberg—do you read me? This is urgent."
Still nothing. Crap.
He'd hoped at least someone in the crew would be listening to the science
channels used by payload specialists to run their onboard experiments.
Typically, NASA didn't trust the science geeks on Earth to communicate directly
with the astronauts, but the old ways were changing. So if no one was listening
now, that meant either the crew didn't know what was going on outside the
shuttle, or the payload specialists had switched off those frequencies.
He punched in the
main comm frequency. "Gator, Iceberg—Payload Button two." He
immediately switched to a prearranged frequency the crew would know from the
checklist, but nothing happened. He tried again. "Come on, dammit!"
Seconds later a
cautious voice came over the radio. "Iceberg?"
Iceberg felt his heart yammer. Yes! He
leaned forward in his chair, forgetting the ordeal he had undergone the last
half hour. "Gator, I don't have much time."
"Iceberg, what
the hell are you doing on this channel? CAPCOM will have a fit! Where are
you?"
"Gator, shut up.
I've got something important to tell you."
22
GATOR SWITCHED OFF THE onboard radio in cold astonishment. Iceberg's voice had
been broadcast over the shuttle's main intercom system to the entire crew,
breathlessly asserting that Atlantis was being held hostage. It chilled
him to realise that the news explained a lot of the strange happenings.
The shuttle's cockpit
windows stared up and ahead, straight up into the blue Florida sky-effectively
blinding them to anything happening on the ground away from the launchpad.
He looked over as Dr.
Marc Franklin snorted. "What's the matter, Marc?" Gator asked.
"You don't believe him?"
Franklin looked
disgusted. "Lieutenant Commander Green, your friend has gone one step too
far in his practical jokes. Don't you think we'd have been able to verify this
before his call? How many other channels of information do we have coming into
the shuttle?"
"And how many
times has CAPCOM refused to answer our questions about this indefinite
hold?" he said defensively. "If the LCC has been taken over, like
Iceberg said—"
"It's a
piss-poor joke. That cowboy may be amused by his stupid fighter-pilot pranks,
but a stunt like this could cost us the mission—and his career." Franklin
picked up the checklist, as if it might have an answer for him. "Since he
can't fly himself, he wants to ground us, too."
Alexandra Koslovsky's
voice came from behind and below in her mission specialist's chair. "This
team knows Colonel Iceberg well enough, Dr. Franklin. He understands difference
between joking and seriousness."
Franklin twisted in
his seat and frowned down at the pretty cosmonaut as if he couldn't believe
what she had said.
"Standard
procedure, Marc," Gator spoke up. "We've got to check this out.
Iceberg has more respect for this shuttle—and for us—than any other person in
NASA. Just check it out."
"Great,"
muttered Franklin, his voice dripping with sarcasm. "What's going to
happen next—mutiny? We abandon ship because he says 'boo'?"
Gator reached up to
change the frequency on the main cockpit comm, drawing a deep breath to keep
from making a retort that he would regret. If it had been Iceberg sitting in
the left-hand seat, Gator would have given a snappy, smartass answer. But
Franklin showed all the signs of someone who was in over his head, taking
everything personally and listening to no advice.
Gator said, "It
won't hurt to ask a few careful questions, just in case. Isn't it strange that
CAPCOM hasn't given us any reason for the hold? They always give a reason, even
if it's only to cover their own butts."
"Maybe they're
too busy trying to get us out of this hold."
Gator gritted his
teeth. "That's not the way it's supposed to be done. It's not in the
checklist, and it sure as hell was never in the simulator. This isn't a green
card with a new problem, Marc."
Franklin looked
annoyed. "We'll see about this." He reached up and changed the main
radio to CAPCOM. He clicked his microphone even as Gator tried to caution him.
Franklin brushed him aside. "CAPCOM, Atlantis. Do you copy?"
When Nicole Hunter's
voice came back, she sounded strained. "Atlantis, we need you to
sit tight. We're working on a time-critical problem. We're, uh, having
difficulty with the comm and need these channels for the engineers to inspect
the system. We'll get back to you as soon as we
can.
"Hey!"
sputtered Gator. "What the hell is Panther doing speaking for Houston
CAPCOM? She can't do that!"
Franklin raised his
eyebrows at Gator and clicked on the mike. "Copy that, Launch Control.
Please be informed that we have received some . . . uh, spurious transmissions
on this frequency. Can you verify any unusual problems at LCC? Unauthorized access,
for instance—"
Gator flicked off the
microphone and grabbed Franklin's elbow. "Careful. You know something's
wrong if Launch Control is speaking directly to us—CAPCOM would never allow
that to happen! What if Iceberg's right?"
Franklin shook off
Gator's hand. "Excuse me, Launch Control—has there been an unscheduled
change in CAPCOM procedures?"
Nicole Hunter's voice
came back slowly over the speaker. "Atlantis, we need this channel
open. I repeat, we're holding at T minus twenty and your instructions are not
to interfere. Copy that?"
"Sorry to bother
you, Launch Control. We've had a communication from Iceberg that—"
Gator grabbed the
mike away from him. "Roger that, Launch. We'll keep quiet. Atlantis out."
He switched off the radio, then turned to Franklin. He could barely control his
anger. "What are you thinking, Commander? Houston controls all
communications to the crew, not the LCC. They've been cut off somehow."
"She's the
Launch Director, and we're supposed to stay put," Franklin said,
stubbornly oblivious. "How much clearer could she have been?"
"She didn't even
answer your questions! None of them. If everything was all right, Houston would
be going ape-shit right now. Something is wrong."
Franklin thought for
a second, trying to concoct an excuse that even he could believe. "You
heard her: There's a communications breakdown. And maybe she didn't understand
what I was trying to say."
It was Gator's turn
to snort. "Give me a break, Commander. Panther not only understood it, but
she confirmed what Iceberg told us."
"You're
crazy."
"And you're
stupider than hell. Sir." His frustration and anger finally drove
away his usual good humor. "I just spoke with Panther about Iceberg not
more than two hours ago. She knows how he acts—she almost married the guy, and
he was commander of this crew until last week. We know him, too. And you're
just being dense." Then he dropped his voice, somewhat cowed by his own
words. "No disrespect, sir, but this is an emergency situation."
Franklin looked
around the cockpit, as if trying to come to grips with the situation. His face
hardened, but his overt anger faded. "You really think this ridiculous
story is true?"
Gator felt his heart
pound harder than he had imagined it would during the actual launch. "I
believe Iceberg. That's the important part. The scary thing is—what are
we going to do about it?"
23
NICOLE SWITCHED OFF THE radio link to Atlantis, working to keep her
expression calm and emotionless, though a hurricane raged inside her. Showing
fear, showing panic, showing any sort of indecision would only provoke these
terrorists, and she didn't want to give Mr. Phillips an excuse or make anything
easier for him.
Iceberg! Here? She struggled to
keep her surprise from showing.
She had known the
shuttle crew would immediately suspect something out of the ordinary when she
called them directly instead of going through Houston CAPCOM. The precedent of
using CAPCOM had been set in the Mercury era, when the astronauts would only
communicate with one of their own—a Capsule Communicator. Now she'd have to
figure out her next step. She hoped the Atlantis crew wouldn't do
anything foolish.
Touching the delicate
gold key on its chain around her neck, she tried to focus. Her father had
called it the key to her future, able to unlock her dreams. But she wouldn't
have a future anywhere if she didn't resolve this disaster somehow. She had to
assess the situation, put the pieces together, and make some sort of solution work.
"Just how long
do you expect the crew to wait, Mr. Phillips?" she said, hoping to
distract him. She had caught Franklin's comment, and though she couldn't figure
out how Iceberg had gotten himself involved, she knew that it was just
his style. As usual, she wanted to strangle him for barging in like a
bulldozer. He never took ill-considered actions, but he never wavered from his
determination either, and his stunts might endanger the lives of everyone.
"They'll just
have to wait as long as is necessary," the little man answered, annoyance
showing on his face. He tapped his fingertips together and paced around the VIP
observation deck. "A great deal of forethought went into this operation,
Ms. Hunter—perhaps as much as goes into preparing for a shuttle launch. The Atlantis
crew wasn't supposed to speak to you about the extended hold until"—he
pulled out his PDA and flipped it open to scan down the items on his
list—"until about ten minutes from now. Fortunately, as with any NASA
launch, we have allowed for problems in our own private countdown.
"I do, however,
need to determine exactly how the crew was contacted and alerted as to our
presence, and how to keep it from happening again. Clearly, someone has clued
them in. Feel free to make any helpful suggestions."
"I'm afraid you
would find my suggestions particularly unhelpful," Nicole retorted,
"and anatomically impossible to boot."
"Now, now. Don't
let the stress get to you," Mr. Phillips said. He picked up a
walkie-talkie and depressed the "transmit" button. "Duncan, come
in please. Duncan, are you there?" He waited while everyone else in the
VIP deck remained motionless, terrified.
Nicole ransacked her
brain for something to do but came up with no solutions. She looked down at the
rows of concerned engineers and technicians in the security-locked firing room.
The LCC workers were clearly restless, their faces either livid or pale. The
preposterous situation had already rattled them, but the call from the Atlantis
crew had pushed many over the brink.
"Come on,
Duncan—answer me," Mr. Phillips said into the walkie-talkie.
Rusty snorted.
"Probably out taking a piss. You just can't count on some people."
Mr. Phillips shot a sharp glance at him.
"Our Duncan is far too much of a professional to wander away." He
tried three more times, then slammed the set down. "Something has happened
to him. Most distressing."
Nicole fought to hide
her hopes.
She did not see how
the ruckus started on the firing floor—but in a moment all the technicians and
engineers were shouting, clamoring, waving their clenched fists up at the
windows for Mr. Phillips to see, while others pushed toward the security-locked
doors where Yvette stood guard with her weapon.
"Oh, now what is
it?" Mr. Phillips said.
Yvette came sprinting
up. "I have smashed the code lock at the door, Monsieur Phillips. I'm not
sure they believe our gunmen are standing outside the emergency exits."
Mr. Phillips shook
his head, stroking his lapel. "They seem to have a misconception as to
their options," he said. "Ms. Hunter, I defer to your authority. Get
on the intercom and tell your people to cease this childishness instantly, or
I'll ask Rusty to make an example of someone. You'd like that wouldn't you,
Rusty?"
"Definitely, Mr.
Phillips. There's plenty to choose from."
Nicole gritted her
teeth and resisted for just a second. Mr. Phillips picked up on her emotion but
did not give her a chance to express it. He spoke coldly. "Ms. Hunter, if
you don't make the announcement this instant, I will show you just how
unimportant some of these hostages are to me."
Nicole believed him
utterly. She grabbed the microphone. Even with her hands tied here, at least
she could prevent other people from getting killed. That had to be her first
priority.
"This is the
Launch Director. Firing Floor, keep it down! You have to sit quiet or
these"—she cleared her throat—"these gentlemen will start
killing hostages. There's nothing you can do from your stations." She prayed under her breath
that they would believe her. Their noise quieted
to an uneasy muttering. "Let's just wait it out."
"Very good, Ms.
Hunter," Mr. Phillips said, straightening his tie. "I should have recruited you
as part of our team. Such an aura of command! It
sends shivers down my spine. Ever think of using your talent on Wall Street?" He smiled at her. She glowered back.
Mr. Phillips started
pacing. He seemed deeply disturbed about his missing Duncan but struggled to
cover it with aloofness. He tapped a finger against his lip. "Let us
consider this—we're controlling all communications with the shuttle, but
somehow the crew was contacted in the cockpit. The astronauts are aware of our
situation, at least partially. So someone has alerted them from the ground.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but that must not be a simple thing to do. Otherwise
our astronauts would be getting radio solicitation calls from life insurance
salesmen as they await the countdown."
Rusty laughed, but
Mr. Phillips didn't revel in the humor. He continued his analysis.
"Therefore I must assume that with your superhuman abilities as Launch
Director, Ms. Hunter, you can determine where that bothersome call
originated. I want to know immediately." He stopped his pacing and turned
to grip the edge of a table. His fingers tightened, as if he were fighting to
keep his composure.
Nicole sat down,
purposely sliding away from the banks of phones and computer terminals, and
crossed her arms over her chest. Iceberg was a pain in the butt, but she would
never set him up for these assassins. "If you think I'm going to lift a
little finger to help you, you're—"
Mr. Phillips pounded
his fist on the counter, losing his cool in an alarming emotional change.
"I have no desire to argue the point! I have a precise timetable to
keep."
He shifted his flinty
gaze from Rusty to Nicole, past the senator and his aides, to the news
cameramen. He smoothed his hair, then spoke in measured tones. "Yvette,
would you be so kind as to kill one of the cameramen? Our friend Ms. Hunter
seems unconvinced of our resolve."
The big blond woman
reached into her waist satchel, rummaging among the clanking sharp-bladed
exotic weapons she carried.
The cameramen glanced
at each other. Two put down their cameras, rigid with fear. Mr. Phillips eyed
them dispassionately. "Oh, go ahead and do the one from channel seven. I
never liked channel seven."
The singled-out
cameraman blinked, unsure what was going on. With a smile of satisfaction
Yvette withdrew a strange, looped blade from her collection—a set of brass knuckles with
razor-edged sawteeth that looked like wicked shark fins extending from her
fist.
"Wait a minute," Nicole blurted,
standing up. "Okay, I believe you—
Mr. Phillips just
sighed. "But I'm afraid I don't believe you, Ms. Hunter—and
I don't want to have to go through this discussion every time I make a simple
request." He nodded to Yvette.
With a springy step
the blond Amazon stalked toward the cameraman like a predator. The man raised
his heavy video cam and backed against one of the narrow viewing windows.
"Hey, wait a minute," the cameraman squawked as Yvette approached him
with calculated slowness, confidence. "I didn't do anything. Hold
it!"
Rusty held everyone
else at bay with his two big pistols, smiling as he watched the lithe blond.
Yvette's pale blue eyes seemed like tiny disks of frost. She swept her bladed
fist back and forth, making a swishing sound.
"Mr. Phillips, I
told you I would do it." Nicole bolted up and stepped forward. "Stop
this bullying behavior. It's . . ." What would affect him? What would get
his attention? "It's uncivilized."
He looked at her, his
eyebrows raised. "Yes, I suppose it is."
Yvette bent over, her
eyes narrowing as she coiled to spring. The helpless man held his video cam as
if it were a shield. "Back off!"
"Oh, brother!
This takes too long." Rusty released the thumb safety, casually pointed
his handgun, and fired. With a quick coughing sound, a single bullet slammed
into the reporter's chest, smashing him against the wall. Bright red smears ran
down the cinderblock where the bullet had penetrated.
Rusty lunged forward
to rescue the heavy video cam as the man slumped, gagging and coughing blood.
He snatched the camera from rubbery fingers, then held it up and used the
fabric of his jumpsuit to polish away two droplets of blood from the lens.
"Whew!" he said. "Expensive equipment."
Yvette, thwarted from
her enjoyment, glared at Rusty, then moved in on him instead. The redhead
stepped back and brought up his handgun.
Mr. Phillips
interposed himself between Yvette and Rusty. "Calm down, both of
you," he said. "Rusty, you must not be so impulsive. If I can't count
on you to follow orders—explicitly—I will consider cutting you from
seven-and-a-half percent down to five."
"Hey, Mr.
Phillips! You owe me, after all I've—"
"Yes, Rusty,
as you never fail to remind me. But you must follow the plan and do as I say.
Besides, you're stealing all of Yvette's fun."
"Tell her not to
take so long next time," he said petulantly. "Didn't you say we're on
a tight schedule?"
"Yes, we
are," Mr. Phillips said. "Yvette, perhaps you should try to enjoy
yourself a bit less next time."
"Oui." She glanced at Rusty. “Next time.”
Senator Boorman
gasped, hyperventilating. He stood but was unable to speak. Nicole, felt as if
she had turned to ice, suffocating in regrets. She should have argued more,
insisted that Mr. Phillips stop—or she should have argued less in the first
place, did what the terrorist told her to do. It was the coward's way out—but
if she had cooperated immediately, that man wouldn't now be dead. He lay soaked
in blood on the floor, as if accusing her.
Andrei Trovkin stood
up, then sat down again, simmering enough that his black-rimmed eyeglasses
seemed on the verge of steaming up. He gazed at Nicole, then at the others, but
managed to restrain himself, though he looked as if he wanted to go berserk.
Nicole slumped back
in her chair. She gripped the padded arms to keep from trembling. An internal
sound like roaring wind passed her ears, but she could not concentrate. Think.
Think! How could she get out of this?
She needed to draw on
all her skills as a cool-headed negotiator, all the politics she had learned
after leaving the astronaut program and entering the cutthroat world of upper
management. This negotiation had a prize far more important than simple
budgetary victories. Shooting off her mouth had just cost the life of an
innocent man. She felt powerless—and she suspected that was exactly what Mr.
Phillips wanted.
The little man folded
his hands in front of him as if he were patiently praying in front of an
audience. "Now that I have your full attention, Ms. Hunter," he said,
"I shall ask you again. Where did the radio call come from? Did it come
from a would-be hero on the firing floor below? Who is this Iceberg, and how
did he get in touch with Atlantis? I need to know, and you must tell
me."
"No, the call
didn't come from the firing floor." Her shoulders slumped. "Iceberg
is the call sign for Colonel Adam Friese, the former commander of this mission—and
he is definitely not here," she said dully. "It'll take me a minute
to track where the call came from."
"Colonel
Friese!" Mr. Phillips exclaimed. "The poor man with the broken
ankle?"
"Broken
foot," Nicole said, pleased to be able to correct him. With numb fingers
she punched into the keyboard and studied one of the monitors at the guest
station. Behind the glass wall stood her now-unoccupied Launch Director's
station on the firing floor, the chair pointedly empty, but she couldn't go down
there now. She had to do what she could to solve the mystery from up here.
Mr. Phillips's intuition was right. Very few communications
systems had the ability to reach the cockpit directly. Iceberg couldn't have
just picked up a radio and spoken to Gator, though he did know the command
frequencies. Given the right transmitting equipment, the correct security
protocol, he could reach his former crew. . .
A message flashed up
on her terminal, and Nicole sat bolt upright. Of course, the Vehicle Assembly
Building!
Mr. Phillips saw her
reaction. "Yes, Miss Hunter? And what answer do you have for me?"
"I . . . uh . .
." she mumbled, her mind whirling.
Mr. Phillips tapped
his fingers on the countertop, whistling the theme from the game show Jeopardy.
He nodded to Yvette, who still clenched the razor-edged blade over her
knuckles. Nicole got the point.
"The VAB,"
she said dully. "The Vehicle Assembly Building. That's where the call came
from."
Nicole felt a rush of
adrenaline. Iceberg was inside the secure zone. The VAB had been
evacuated well before the launch, and these terrorists claimed to have secured
the perimeter beyond that point. But Iceberg had gotten himself trapped
somewhere inside. Always where he wasn't supposed to be . . . that was
just like him.
She should have known
something was up the moment Mr. Phillips tossed the mission patch onto the
counter. The name FRIESE embroidered at the top now leaped out at her. She
couldn't imagine how Phillips had gotten the old patch, but that didn't matter
right now.
She felt a surge of
anger, knowing how volatile the dapper little man was. If Iceberg was running
around inside KSC, a loose cannon, a maverick, she hoped he didn't screw
everything up. Negotiations would be delicate enough.
Then she realized
they had very little to lose. Her own tactics weren't doing much good, as the
murdered cameraman showed. Iceberg might even be their only hope.
Mr. Phillips grabbed
the walkie-talkie again and tuned to a specific frequency. He clicked the
"transmit" button and spoke. "Hello, Mory? Mr. Phillips
here." He tensed for a moment until an acknowledgment crackled over the
speaker. "Good, at least one team member is where he's supposed to be!
Would you and Cueball please make your way to the Vehicle Assembly Building? We
seem to have a pest, and he has holed himself up there. I would consider it a
personal favor if you two would remove him with . . . what is the Hollywood
phrase? Ah, yes. With extreme prejudice."
"Acknowledged, Mr. Phillips,"
came the nasal voice over the speaker.
Nicole clenched her
fists but kept her mouth shut, afraid a careless comment might cost another
life. Iceberg had gotten himself into a mess, as usual, and he would have to
fend for himself.
But he was good at
doing that.
Mr. Phillips checked
his PDA and read a brief snatch of information. "Colonel Adam Friese, call
sign Iceberg. Ah! Our former commander has a rather checkered record on
file. Seems to be quite competent, but he can barely walk with his foot in a
cast that goes up to his knee." He glanced at his watch. "And we have
three and a half hours until the gems arrive."
He flipped shut the
PDA. "I don't suppose Iceberg will be any problem at all."
24
ICEBERG SAT WITHIN THE glassed-in command post of the cavernous Vehicle Assembly
Building, tensely watching the lower bay door, feeling all alone. As he saw the
two men approach, a sense of relief washed over him.
"It's about time, NASA Security." He had wondered how long it would take the space agency forces to sweep past the terrorists. He stood, keeping the weight off his cast.
The two men crept
into the VAB, looking from side to side. As they entered, they rotated around a common
center, keeping their weapons pointed outward, prepared for a surprise attack.
Iceberg started to
limp toward the door when it struck him that these two moved too stealthily,
too silently. Something didn't seem quite right.
"Why do I get
the feeling this isn't the cavalry?"
Maybe it was the fact
that they wore mud-streaked camouflage outfits. Or maybe it was just the
oversized backpack that held what looked like too much ammunition for a
security detail.
He muttered,
"They don't exactly look like they're here to help."
He ducked out of the
confining command post, not wanting to be there unprotected and alone, on the
vast empty floor under High Bay number 3. He hissed in pain as he limped toward
the steel-reinforced concrete walls and the elevators that led up to the high
bays. Time to switch plans again, he thought. He had to get out of sight
until he figured out what these two heavily armed men were after.
There didn't seem
much question, though, that they were after him. He punched the
"open" button, but the red-painted doors of the cargo elevator
refused to budge. A loud clank echoed from above and the lift started
down. Iceberg pushed the button again and again, urging the door to open.
"Come on, come on!"
The silhouettes of
the two intruders appeared against the big rectangle of outside sunshine from
the lower bay doors. Bright industrial lights shone garishly from above.
Catwalks and access arms on the Mobile Launcher Platform—used for assembly of
the solid rocket boosters and for mating the shuttle's external tank to the
orbiter—masked part of the glare.
The VAB operations
had ceased following the standard launch-day evacuation, and the sound of the
elevator engine and hydraulics seemed as loud as thunder as the elevator
continued its descent.
The two shadowy
intruders hustled toward High Bay 3.
The cargo elevator
doors finally ground open. Iceberg stumbled inside and punched the button for
level 3, which would take him away from immediate harm, yet where he could keep
an eye on the intruders.
As the elevator
lurched upward, Iceberg held the rails inside, keeping weight off his left
foot. His head pounded, and his entire body sprouted aches like weeds. This
made the NASA astronaut training tortures seem like a Sunday bicycle ride. He
hadn't put out this much sweat since trying out for the wrestling team his
doolie year at the Air Force Academy.
There might be
something to a calm, desk jockey job like Panther's after all.
When the elevator
doors opened, Iceberg took one deep breath before he made his way out onto the
high walkway. Red metal railings bordered the path. He crept forward, moving
slowly so that the motion would not attract the attention of the two enemies
below. He held the rail, gritting his teeth, as residual pain thudded through
his entire foot; it had probably swollen into the cast.
Looking three levels
down to the floor, Iceberg saw the creeping, heavily armed figures. He felt
cold sweat break out along his skin. "Chill out," he said to himself.
He narrowed his eyes
in the dimness of the vast building, studying the two intruders as they glided
into the enclosed low bay, scuttling like plague rats. They must be searching
for the elevator.
It would take their
eyes a moment to adjust after coming in from the bright Florida sunshine, so
Iceberg used that to his advantage. Study the enemy, find his weakness . . . he
tried to remember all that Military Studies crap he hadn't paid attention to
when he'd been a cadet. Think. Deception. Speed.
Iceberg edged over
and studied the two. One man was large and muscular with skin the color of
mahogany. His head was completely bald and so shiny it glistened, as if he used
furniture polish on his scalp. The other man, who carried the backpack, had
sharp narrow features that made him look like a weasel. His cheeks were covered
with wispy, wiry hair in a pathetic attempt at a beard. He walked forward with
his aquiline nose eerily raised, as if he were sniffing the air.
The open spaces of
the VAB were filled with lifting cranes, dangling chains from overhead girders
in heavy-duty block-and-tackle arrangements, pumping systems, safety fences.
Fluttering yellow plastic tape demarcated an area designated for recent
propellant fueling. DANGER—DO NOT CROSS.
In front of him in
High Bay 3 stood a pair of cylindrical solid rocket boosters, canisters of
propellant twelve feet in diameter that looked like white grain silos. Heavy
cranes stacked and mated each booster section on the two-story Mobile Launcher
Platform, a technological island that provided a transportable launch base for
the shuttle to be hauled out to the launchpad by the slow-moving crawler
transporter.
Below, the two
terrorists stepped stealthily across the floor. They swept their eyes upward,
scanning the high catwalks. The weaselly guy sniffed again. Iceberg remained in
the shadows above, knowing they would spot him instantly if he moved.
But Iceberg had never
been one to sit around and hide when he could conceive of a course of action.
He studied the catwalk beside him, searching for something he could use as a
weapon, not just to defend himself but to take an active role.
He spotted only a
bench bolted to the floor, a case of disposable plastic safety goggles, and a
tool locker. Stepping quietly and trying not to put much weight on his broken
foot, Iceberg crept forward. Farther down the catwalk he saw a rack of gas
canisters: oxygen, acetylene, and compressed helium. The helium and oxygen were
in large metal tanks that were chest high, far too heavy to heave—but one of
the blowtorch acetylene tanks was the size of a small scuba tank, easy enough
to lift. . . and when accelerated by three stories of height, it just might
make a decent bomb. Iceberg had always prided himself on his ability to
improvise.
He withdrew the tank
and staggered to the rail. Below him the two thugs continued searching possible
hiding places in the lower levels, still without calling out or making a sound.
The two were quite methodical, working on a grid search pattern. It would be
only a matter of time before they came up level by level to flush him out.
Iceberg had to act while he had a height advantage.
As they walked under
him, he ran his mind through parabolic trajectories, doing a few calculations
to determine how far out he had to toss the tank so it would drop straight on
the head of one of the men. Just like lobbing an old Mark 5 bomb. He did his
best, allowed for their movement below—then heaved the heavy projectile.
He watched it sail
out silently, pirouetting in the air as it began to drop like a stone. The
containers were pressurized, but thick-walled. He hoped it would hit the ground
and blow up, eliminating both men.
The tank struck the
concrete less than a foot behind the bald black man.
The metal canister
did not explode but ricocheted off the cement with a monstrous clang. Both
men practically leaped out of their skins. The bald man remained silent, but
the weasel scrambled backward, yelling and looking around. He fired short wild
bursts of his automatic rifle into the distant walls, where the bullets
ricocheted off the concrete and flew into the open high bay. Weasel swung his
rifle around, looking for another target. The gunshots still echoed in the
enclosed VAB.
With grim
satisfaction Iceberg saw a spreading wet spot in the weasel's crotch.
The bald man silently
extended his arm, pointing toward the third-level catwalk, indicating Iceberg's
hiding place.
Uh-oh, thought
Iceberg, backing up. He turned to the waiting elevator, punching the button for
the red metal doors to groan open again. He could hear Weasel shouting below to
the bald thug.
"Cueball, go up
there and get him! I'll come around the other side as soon as I check in. I
want to twist that bastard's head off myself." He brushed at his damp
pants.
Silently, Cueball
hustled off to the metal stairs. Just as the elevator doors ground open,
Iceberg heard Weasel grab his walkie-talkie. "Mr. Phillips, this is Mory.
We've got him cornered in the VAB." He paused as the muffled voice
crackled back. Iceberg couldn't understand the words. "Yes, he's being
annoying—but we'll take care of it. Mory out."
Leaning back into the
elevator, Iceberg punched the button for the top level of the high bay. He
could think of no way to outrun them, but if he could lure them to follow to
the highest levels, Iceberg could double back and get down, escape the VAB on
the all-terrain buggy.
Iceberg emerged from
the top level of the catwalk, and now the floor was very, very far down. It
seemed as if he had already reached halfway to orbit by taking an elevator
instead of a space shuttle. Unlike a normal building with floors and offices
each step of the way, the Vehicle Assembly Building was a giant boxed-in open
space, like a hangar.
Iceberg had gained
breathing room for the moment, but he didn't know what to do next. The bad guys
must have seen him get into the elevator, and they knew he wasn't on floor 3
anymore. Should he try to get their attention somehow, trick them? He crept
along the catwalk delicately, trying not to drag his cast.
Suddenly, on the
opposite wall of the high bay four floors below him, he saw the muscular bald
man, Cueball, stalking down another narrow walkway, his high-powered rifle in
hand. The bald man glanced up at the movement and noticed Iceberg above. Their
eyes met from across the gulf of open air. Cueball's mouth opened but no sound
came out. Iceberg had suspected the man was mute, and now he could not call
attention to Mory.
But Cueball aimed
with his rifle and quickly popped off two shots. Iceberg dove backward against
the wall, ducking down. The bullets missed him by yards, leaving white starflowers
where they had ricocheted.
But the sound of the
gunfire and the spang of impact was enough to tell Mory where Iceberg had
hidden.
Iceberg scuttled
along. The solid rocket boosters stood like white pillars in the open space.
One of the yellow-painted 250-ton lifting cranes stretched out in the open
while other chains, block and tackle, and pulleys dangled from the high ceiling
overhead.
He moved back to the
elevator. He should take the stairs, but the thought of descending all the
way back down to ground level with a broken foot seemed almost worse than being
shot outright by the terrorists.
As he reached the
elevator, though, he saw the indicator lights moving. The hum of machinery
brought the lift up to the top floor. Someone was coming to get him. Mory.
Just as the elevator
chimed with the car's arrival, Iceberg flattened himself against the wall
beside the red-painted doors. His heart pounded. His vision focused to crystal
clarity. He saw the open space, the long drop, and the thin dangling chains in
front of the safety rail by the elevator. The metal doors creaked open, and
weasel-faced Mory strode out in a crouch, fanning his assault rifle in front of
him, ready to take out his target.
Iceberg didn't give
him a chance.
With his good foot he
shoved off from the wall and launched forward like a torpedo. Iceberg struck
Mory's side just as he was turning, and smashed into the lumpy pack—and Iceberg
kept going.
Mory let out a cry,
and a burst of rifle fire sprayed into the open air— but Iceberg shoved the
weaselly man forward into the safety rail with enough impact that the thug's
breath exploded out of him. Without pausing to think, Iceberg grabbed one of
the dangling chains and whipped it in several loops around Mory's ankle.
Iceberg put his shoulder into the shove and knocked the bearded man over the
railing.
Mory shrieked in
terror as he sailed out into empty space, falling several feet until the thin
chain caught. Iceberg heard the crunch of the ankle snapping, as if the chain
were a noose around a condemned man's neck.
Mory dangled upside
down over the high bay, flailing with his hands to reach the rail, to find some
stability. The automatic assault rifle dropped, tumbling in the air. It struck
the floor with a loud clatter several seconds later.
"Help!"
Mory cried. "You bastard." His face was a bright beet color as he
hung suspended. The wet spot at his crotch had darkened.
Iceberg grabbed the
chain and hauled Mory closer. The chain tore into Iceberg's hand. The thug
reached out, flailing for the safety rail, but Iceberg kept the weaselly man
from reaching it. "Who are you? What are you after?"
"Fuck you,"
Mory said.
Iceberg swung the
chain, making the man dangle farther out in the open bay. He grunted from
Mory's weight. The weasel wailed in terror from the height and from the pain of
the chain wrapped around his snapped ankle.
"How many times
are we going to have to do this?" Iceberg panted. "Who are you?"
"Get me down! I'm not telling you anything."
Iceberg leaned over
the rail and looked down. He gained purchase against the railing and hauled
Mory up another foot, then released the chain.
Mory fell two feet
and stopped with a sudden jerk. He screamed.
It took Iceberg a
moment to catch his breath before he said, "From this level the Vehicle
Assembly Building is five hundred and twenty-five feet high. Imagine the splash
pattern you'd make. I can keep quoting you statistics . . . or you can start
telling me some answers."
"All right, all
right!" Mory cried. "Just get me closer to the rail."
Iceberg pulled the
chain, hand over hand. Slowly he brought his captive near, swinging Mory
around—but just then the weaselly man's eyes widened with surprise and relief.
Iceberg turned, yanking the man on the chain just as Cueball appeared on the
stairwell, firing his high-powered rifle.
Iceberg swung Mory as
a shield. Two bullets tore long bloody channels through the weaselly man's side
and exited through his rib cage.
Iceberg didn't have
any choice but to grab one of the other chains. With his hands wrapped around
the links, he swung out over space.
The chain spun in his
hands, rattling and vibrating as the block-and-tackle ratcheted. He dropped,
swinging toward another level, yelling in his own terror. The chain dropped
him, slowly catching with trip mechanisms in the pulley as Iceberg swung to a
catwalk three floors down. Smashing into the railing, he let go of the chain.
He fell and rolled
onto the catwalk, striking it with his shoulder. His palms were bloody. He
winced as he opened and closed his hands.
He squeezed his eyes
shut as he exhaled a great painful breath. "Man, I never want to do that
again." Iceberg lay trembling, dreading
the prospect of getting back to his feet and
running—but he knew he had to.
Cueball wouldn't give
him a chance to recuperate.
Up on the top level of the high bay, the big bald man reached out
to grab the
chain and pulled Mory back toward the rail.
The other man bled
profusely from the two gunshot wounds, moaning pitifully. He coughed blood and
looked with bleary relief into Cueball's face—but the black man remained
expressionless as he struggled to pull the backpack and the Stinger missiles
from Mory's shoulders. He tugged, and Mory's ankle gave another sharp snap,
evoking a wail of increased pain.
Cueball set his
high-powered rifle behind him. He carefully held the launcher, then fit a
missile inside. He smiled, showing square white teeth as he admired the new
weapon.
Mory groaned once
more. Distractedly, Cueball unwrapped the chain from his broken ankle and let
his partner drop 525 feet to the floor below.
25
DURING THE TENSE MOMENTS in the VIP viewing deck, Nicole watched Senator Boorman's
demeanor evolve from shock to gradually increasing alertness. She cringed to
think what he might do, what ill-advised solutions he might come up with. After
witnessing the cameraman's violent murder, the senator now seemed to be turning
cold, calculating.
The body of the channel 7 cameraman lay slumped against the wall, sticky with blood—a reminder to them all. Mr. Phillips ignored the corpse as he strutted back and forth, glancing at the various TV monitors that showed the Kennedy Space Center, Atlantis on the launchpad, the Vehicle Assembly Building, and the LCC's main firing floor.
Yvette paced
restlessly in the confined observation deck like a caged tiger; her leg and arm
muscles rippled as she walked. Rusty had been sent below to guard the sealed
door to the crowded firing floor.
Senator Boorman drew
himself up, finally making his move. "It's time I had a word with you,
Phillips."
The dapper man
turned, incredulous that the senator had spoken. "That's Mister Phillips
to you, Senator. We are not on a first-name basis. A man with your political
savvy should understand a bit about respect."
"Excuse me,
sir," Boorman amended smoothly. "I apologize. I've considered how I
might be able to help you—as you requested. If it will help resolve this
situation without further bloodshed, I would be willing to make a few phone
calls, check with my political network, and get you what you want. We can end
this situation without letting it get more"— he glanced uncomfortably at
the dead news cameraman—"more complicated. We all want to get out of here
alive."
The senator's gray
eyes gleamed, and Nicole felt cold inside. She had far less confidence in his
abilities and motivations. He had spent decades politicking, but not much time
in the real world facing life-or-death situations.
"I love
uncomplicated situations," Mr. Phillips said. "Very well. Yvette, see
to it that the esteemed senator gets an outside telephone line." The
little man raised his eyebrows. "Show us your brilliant political prowess,
Senator. Get me a briefcase full of gems, by hook or by crook, and I'll give
you your space shuttle back."
Boorman flared his
nostrils but did not reply. Nicole could tell from his expression that Boorman
didn't really care whether or not he got the shuttle back; he simply wanted to
get out of this intact, no matter what the cost to the space program.
As soon as Yvette
nodded to him, Boorman snatched up a phone like a man with a mission, as if he
had stepped into his familiar element once again. His aide pulled out a small
black book and looked up telephone numbers for him, muttering them into
Boorman's ear as he dialed. The senator sat back in a chair and feigned relaxation,
ready to make a deal. As he began chatting into the phone, Nicole got the
distinct impression that Boorman had begun to enjoy himself.
She could see why Iceberg hated bureaucrats so much.
Mr. Phillips startled
Nicole by speaking close to her ear. His breath smelled strongly of peppermint.
"Ms. Hunter, I hope you don't think too ill of me. I have admired your
career for some time now. I've known that great things were in store for you
once you left the Navy, whether you chose to be an astronaut or to play
politics at NASA. From a certain point of view, you and I are really on the
same side."
Nicole snorted, wary
of Mr. Phillips's game. "What could we possibly have in common?"
He waggled a finger
at her. "Tut tut, Ms. Hunter, no need to be rude. We were both present at
the disastrous Ariane launch, for example. We're both just trying to make a
living."
She narrowed her
eyes, squeezing her lips into a moue of disgust. "Why couldn't you just
knock over a bank or something?" Then Nicole drew a deep breath and looked
at him more curiously. "In fact, why didn't you just rob a bank?
Why did you pick something so spectacular and so high risk? You know you don't
have a chance of pulling it off, with the entire country now gearing up against
you."
Mr. Phillips raised a
finger. "Ah, but I do have a chance. A chance— and that's all I need. To
be truthful, though, I did consider robbing a bank. In fact, I considered many
different options. I am, if nothing else, a very meticulous man. After I had
decided on the need to undertake such an operation, I sat down and wrote out
possible operations, then jotted down detailed lists of pros and cons."
"You're all
going to be cons before the day is over," Nicole muttered.
Mr. Phillips gave her
a look of long-suffering patience before he continued. "My team and I came
up with many possibilities. But how many people remember just a bank robber?
Everyone remembers an outrageous bandit such as D. B. Cooper—he's become
an American legend. I'm not just an ordinary person, and this caper will put me
on the cover of every magazine."
His smile carried an
air that was at once swelled with ego and coldly calculating. "Besides,
the potential payoff was much higher in holding the shuttle hostage. Each oil
rig erected in the North Sea, for example, costs the petroleum companies nearly
a billion dollars to build—I've seen their expense sheets—but the corporations
are willing to make such expenditures because the profit potential is so
extreme."
Nicole crossed her
arms over her chest. "But an operation like this one must have cost you a
fortune just to put together, all the plans, all the weapons, all the thugs. If
you're already rich, why risk everything to
get more? And don't give me a lame answer that 'one
can never have enough money.' "
Mr. Phillips seemed
to be enjoying the repartee. "The weapons did cost, but my team members
work on commission, just as contingency attorneys in a corporate lawsuit. It
isn't easy to get people to work on a percentage basis these days, but they
know the potential payoffs, especially for four hours of work. Some of them are
in it because they like the excitement, some of them feel they owe me a favor,
the others . . . well, they have their own reasons."
Nicole could imagine
a bloodthirsty wildcard like Rusty agreeing to do anything just to get a little
excitement in his life.
"Now, given that
I wanted to do something spectacular, we could have threatened to destroy the
Statue of Liberty, the Hoover Dam, the Washington Monument, Wall Drug in South
Dakota. . . ." Mr. Phillips raised his eyebrows. "But I'm not a
particularly murderous man—all those other possibilities would have risked the
lives of thousands of people, but even if I do blow up Atlantis, the
maximum number of deaths would only be seven, all of them astronauts who knew
the risks when they climbed on board. Not to mention a few incidental
civilians, such as our reporter friend from channel seven.
"Another item in
the pros column—I know high-tech, and I love technology, specifically the space
program, perhaps even more passionately than you do. I adore NASA. This
operation had a certain appeal to me."
"You've got a
weird way of showing your affection," she said with a snort.
He looked at the
detonator box, as if admiring its components. "Perhaps you haven't thought
it through, Ms. Hunter. I want to force this country to value their
space program, their future. There's too much apathy among the public.
"I used to rise
at the crack of dawn to watch the live NASA coverage on TV. Not many people get
up for a launch anymore—in fact, the news networks usually just have a sound
bite," he sniffed, "as if a shuttle launch is 'regular news.'
"But with what
I'm doing today"—he gestured with his well-manicured hand around the
LCC—"I'm going to make the viewing public put their money where their
mouth is. Today, they must decide if their space program is worth anything to
them. TANSTAAFL—are you familiar with that acronym, Ms. Hunter? NASA's full of
acronyms."
She answered slowly,
"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch." What is this guy
getting at?
Mr. Phillips beamed,
and his lips curled upward. "Very good—and it's absolutely right. There
ain't no such thing as a free lunch. America is going to have to pay to keep
their space shuttle. Love it or lose it— don't you agree that's a worthwhile
question to pose?"
"And you're
betting they'll pay up," Nicole said.
Mr. Phillips
shrugged. "As I said, I've got to make a living somehow."
Nicole narrowed her
dark eyes. "Some of us do it in legal ways."
Mr. Phillips seemed
unaffected by her venom. "Ms. Hunter, if you've been out in the business
world as long as I have, you'd know that legal methods can be just as brutal as
any act of terrorism. Ever try to cross a stockbroker? Wall Street is just as
much a war zone as the Persian Gulf ever was."
Senator Boorman hung
up the phone, flustered and disturbed. He rubbed his square jaw with one of his
large-knuckled hands. His color had gone pale.
"Success,
Senator?" Mr. Phillips asked with cheerful optimism.
Boorman shook his
head. "I'm encountering resistance from people on the Hill. Getting so
many gems all together in one place is going to be tough. They keep passing me
from one person to another. I can't even get hold of the NASA Administrator—the
president called him into a National Security Council meeting."
"Welcome to the
real world," Nicole muttered.
Boorman lashed out at
her. "I'm the head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Ms. Hunter,
and this is an emergency situation. Nobody should be putting me on hold."
"Then I suggest
you try calling someone else," Mr. Phillips said coldly. "Our
countdown clock is ticking," He held up the small black detonator
controls. "We don't have much time if we're going to save this
shuttle."
"Yeah,"
Nicole said derisively, "because you care about the space program so
much."
Mr. Phillips spoke
with an edge to his voice. "I do care, Ms. Hunter— more than you'd ever
know. But don't take that to mean I won't blow up Atlantis. I've
discarded much dearer things to me for less."
He held up one finger
and his face pinched with an intensity she had seen before only on the faces of
Shakespearean actors. "Listen to me. You've got a weathered old memorial
kiosk at complex thirty-four over at the Cape, on the site of the launchpad fire of Apollo One
that killed
Grissom, White, and Chaffee.
"You've got a
sealed Minuteman missile silo out on ICBM Road that holds the recovered
wreckage from Challenger, cemented shut so that nobody can sell pieces
for souvenirs. And just downstairs in the lobby, one wall is filled with
plaques for all the missions—only one plaque has no landing date. Challenger,
again. A national wound.
"I've been to
your beautiful astronaut's memorial erected at Spaceport USA to honor all those
who have died serving in the American space program—and there are plenty of
blank spots remaining. Do you really want me to fill in a few new names? Seven
more names?" He ticked them off on his hand. "Franklin, Green, Burns,
Koslovsky, Orlov, Purvis, Nichi."
Nicole met his gaze
coldly. Finally, she shook her head.
"The shuttle is
a magnificent machine, a marvel of engineering," said Mr. Phillips.
"The astronauts are true heroes—don't force me to make them into
martyrs." He stabbed his finger at her. "But I'll do it if you can't
cough up my price."
One of the telephones
inside the firing floor began to ring, startling everyone with its loud sound
even behind the Plexiglas walls. The noise would normally have been drowned out
in the bustle of prelaunch activities. Now, though, everyone turned toward the
sound. The phone rang a second time.
It was the telephone on the Launch
Director's desk. "It would appear someone is trying to call you, Ms.
Hunter," Mr. Phillips said.
"I'm the Launch
Director," she answered, feigning disinterest. "It's supposed to be a
busy day for me." But her heart pounded with intense fear—could it be
Iceberg? She knew Mr. Phillips had sent two killers after him in the VAB.
The phone rang again.
No one moved to pick it up. Nicole wondered if she should reach out and punch
the button to transfer the call to the observation deck. Finally, after a
fourth ring, her eyes locked with Mr. Phillips's. He nodded briefly. "Go
ahead, answer it."
She reached out and
paused to concentrate on her movements, making sure that her hand didn't
tremble. Then she grabbed a headset and depressed the button to transfer the
call. "Hello?" she said, hoping it was Iceberg, hoping for him to say
that he had taken care of the two terrorists and was now coming to rescue
everyone in the LCC. That would be just the way he'd do it—in front of all the cameras . . . and
get himself killed in the process.
On the phone she
heard only silence, then the distant sound of a scuffle, faded shouting.
"Hello?" she said again, more loudly—then she heard nothing else.
Nicole swallowed hard and hung up.
Mr. Phillips watched
her intently. "Yes?" he asked. "I suppose it must be your friend
Colonel Friese?"
"Wrong
number," she said.
"Ah," he
said, clearly disbelieving her. "Well, at least it wasn't a telephone
solicitor." Mr. Phillips spun on his heel. "I'll go see how our
friend the senator is doing." He stepped away to hover behind Boorman, who
was still talking heavily into another phone.
Nicole sat back in a
rush, dizzy from adrenaline. Andrei Trovkin turned from his perpetual position
of staring out the narrow launch windows toward the distant gantry. He kept his
voice low as he spoke to Nicole.
"I feel like
helpless baby. How is it that a gang of bullies can cause such enormous
problems?" He shook his head, then scratched his close-cropped brown hair,
straightening his black-rimmed glasses. He heaved a heavy sigh. "We find
ourselves trapped in little room like accountants with nothing more important
to do. We are outside of loop in grand space program." He looked up at the
ceiling. "Ah, to be inside cockpit of Atlantis at this moment. You
and I, my friend, were both cut out to be brave astronauts—that little man
Phillips makes me want to do something."
Nicole looked around,
and her eyes met the pale deep-freeze gaze of Yvette as she prowled among the
hostages. "You'll just get yourself killed," she muttered to Andrei.
"Unfortunately,
you are correct," he agreed.
Withdrawing into
herself, Nicole pondered the Russian's words. He did have a point—perhaps the
two of them were cut out to be astronauts— but she didn't agree with his
assessment. She and the ambassador may have started out with the same goals,
intent on exploring space, riding rockets into orbit—but Andrei had left the
cosmonaut program for medical reasons. Nicole, on the other hand, had chosen
to step out of the race, walking away from the rigors of training to become
a desk jockey rather than following her dreams. She touched the gold key on her
necklace. No, she had simply chosen different dreams, but they were still her
dreams.
That had been one of
the main reasons her relationship with Iceberg had crumbled. They'd once had
much in common, but she couldn't compete with him anymore. Iceberg didn't know
how to deal with her change of heart. He couldn't fathom it. He was always a
bulldozer, insisting on his way or no way. He made Nicole feel she had taken
the easy way out— and it stung because she suspected Iceberg may have been
exactly right. She glanced at the video monitor, seeing the close-up of the
motionless shuttle on the launchpad. Knowing the crew was in peril caused her
insides to knot up. Conflicting thoughts whirled in her head. She could have
been there herself. She might have been one of the trapped astronauts in
the cockpit, waiting for some manager to come to the rescue.
Trovkin reminded her
very much of Iceberg, wanting to take action, insisting on tackling any problem
with a thick skull and balled fists. She thought about Iceberg battling
terrorists by himself in the Vehicle Assembly Building, taking matters into his
own hands, fighting impossible odds. It was exactly the way he liked it.
26
FINDING IMPENDING DEATH TO be a great motivator, Iceberg picked
himself up from the hard floor of the high walkway, where he had been thrown
from the chain. Unfortunately, he saw no convenient rocks to crawl under; he
knew he had to move. Now.
Chill. . . cool . . .
frosty . . .
He wished he could use one of the VAB's heavy lifting cranes just to help himself stand up. He hadn't felt this bad since he'd gotten the crap beat out of him in boxing class at the Academy. Talk about déjà vu.
As he moved, his
entire body let out a silent clamor of pain. "All nerve endings firing
quite efficiently, yes sir." He wondered if his body were covered with a
thousand small bruises—or just a dozen huge ones.
He had been so
careful to contact the Atlantis pilot compartment and warn the
astronauts there, rather than directly calling the LCC, so as not to tip his
hand. How had these thugs known he was hiding inside the VAB? Maybe Marc
Franklin hadn't taken him seriously, and blabbed. What a guy.
Iceberg wished he
could have gotten more information from weasel-faced Mory. How many more terrorists
did Mr. Phillips have? He had to contact somebody, now that the terrorists knew
about him anyway. Nicole would be his first choice. Despite his reluctance, he
had nothing to lose— and he needed help as soon as possible.
But right at the
moment, Cueball was coming.
Staggering with every
step, Iceberg worked his way down the walkway toward one of the cargo elevators
again. He waited for the bald man to appear with high-powered rifle in hand.
But the red elevator door remained sealed, without the vibration of the cable
or a descending car.
Iceberg found an
emergency phone near the elevator and picked up the receiver, listening to the
dial tone as he panted and fought back the dizziness brought about by stabbing
pains in his foot and ankle. His hands dripped blood from where his palms had
been scraped open. The buffered aspirins he had taken earlier that morning had
given up on him.
He punched in the
familiar number for the LCC firing floor. Now that his secret was already
blown, he had to let her know what he had done, and
what he intended to do. And this might be his only chance. As mission commander, he knew the Launch Director's private extension,
of course.
How could he remember
such a thing as Nicole's phone number, when
he was trying to forget everything about her?
What a waste of brain cells!
The phone rang once,
then a second time. He glanced behind himself, but he could hear nothing. He saw no motion.
The VAB stood hushed and expectant, and
Iceberg felt very exposed. Cueball must be coming after him in silence. Iceberg
felt his heart thudding. The phone rang again. "Come on, Panther—come
on!" he muttered.
Then he heard the
hydraulics of the elevator. Cueball was on his way down, coming after him.
Against his ear, the phone rang a fourth time. "Nicole, pick
up the phone!"
The elevator dinged.
The hydraulics sighed. Iceberg dropped the phone and let it clack against the
cinderblocks, dangling on its cord. He grabbed a small red fire extinguisher
mounted to the wall.
The elevator door
opened, and the burly bald man lurched out with a satchel slung over one
shoulder. He held his long rifle in both hands. Sweat glistened on his polished
scalp.
Just as Cueball
turned toward him, Iceberg hefted the fire extinguisher toward the big man's
chest. "Here—catch!"
With a grunt of
surprise, the bald man instinctively flinched away from the heavy object,
letting his rifle dip.
Iceberg leaped
sideways behind Cueball, sliding between the doors of the elevator as they
began to glide shut automatically. He felt his adrenaline soaring, barely
enough to muffle the pain in his foot cast to a dull thud. Iceberg pounded the
button for floor 1. The doors sealed.
"Down, down—come
on!" Iceberg said.
He heard a thud as Cueball hit the door with
the flat of his hand, and then again with a clang as he battered with the
discarded fire extinguisher. But the elevator was already descending, too late
for the thug to get at him.
Iceberg breathed
rapidly. His foot hurt like a son of a bitch. He didn't want to move at all—but
he had to. The elevator reached the bottom of the High Bay and opened onto the
vast concrete floor cluttered with equipment. But now that he had a head start
from Cueball, he had to make his way across the open interior of the VAB, get
to the bright outside where he could climb on his all-terrain buggy and roar
off across the swamps.
Feets don't fail
me now!
With a glance behind
him, Iceberg tried to see if the burly mute had climbed into another elevator
or was taking the stairs—but he saw nothing, heard nothing. He found that even
more frightening.
Hobbling at the best
speed he could manage with his cockeyed gait, Iceberg scrambled across the
concrete floor, dodging pumps and generators, parked forklifts, big steel bells
used as test weights for the lifting cranes. Knowing Cueball's high-powered
weapons, he felt the targeting cross crawling over his skin.
Making his way
directly for the yawning outer door of the high bay, he hurried for the shelter
of the tall Mobile Launcher Platform, on which stood the stacked solid rocket
boosters. The sunshine glared brightly on the top of the platform, casting a
jungle of shadows. He passed under the flexible yellow barrier tape.
Iceberg struggled
along, taking cover in camouflaging shadows and in construction equipment. The
VAB's vast open floor seemed as large as Nebraska. But no shots came.
He passed the
splattered remains of Mory lying in the middle of an open loading area. The
body was crumpled, as if a giant hand had tossed him in a puddle of red paint.
A 525-foot drop sure could make a mess of things.
Iceberg focused on
the battered automatic rifle Mory had dropped from high above. Squatting, he
picked it up and scanned wildly around. His palms felt like shredded sausages,
but it was good to have a weapon in his hands.
He laughed at
himself, thinking how he had earlier tried to convince himself he wouldn't be
getting into any shootouts—no sir, not this ole boy! He'd just wanted to make a
phone call to the shuttle cockpit.
From now on, he would
be prepared for anything.
Taking the rifle,
Iceberg worked his way toward the rectangle of sunlight from the outer bay
doors. The way out. The bald thug wouldn't be able to see him hidden inside the
steel labyrinth of the Mobile Launcher Platform, but Iceberg couldn't hide here
forever. He was hurt and could barely move. Cueball knew where he was.
Ahead, daylight
beckoned. Iceberg limped along like a car with two flat tires. Still no
gunshots.
Salvador's
three-wheeler waited just outside. He could get to it in only a few minutes. Finally Iceberg passed out
from under the Mobile Launcher Platform. He ducked, increasing his speed
because now he was out in the open again, heading for the towering, wide-open
doors. He made an easy target. His foot was killing him.
Almost home free. He
risked a glance back to the dim interior of the VAB, turning to see if he could
glimpse the muscular black man. Iceberg spotted movement on one of the catwalks
of the High Bay three stories up. His stomach dropped.
Cueball hadn't been
chasing him after all. He had been getting into position.
On the high walkway
the bald thug had set up a missile launcher and loaded it with what looked like
an explosive-tipped Stinger. Even from far away, Iceberg could see the man's
eyes lock on him. Cueball's silent face broke into a wide grin, showing big
teeth.
"Oh, shit—"
Iceberg said, as his pain vanished into the background. He turned the
commandeered rifle toward Cueball and let off a half dozen rounds. The
automatic weapon belched bullets as its momentum drove the stock into his side.
He heard a spray of ricochets against metal.
Cueball ducked.
Iceberg knew he hadn't hit anything, but he might have bought himself a few
seconds.
He lurched forward,
stepping on his heavy cast but not caring as he made a beeline out the door. If
that missile hit him, he'd need a tombstone instead of a cast.
He collapsed onto the seat of the all-terrain buggy. Grasping
the handle, he started the engine and roared off on the fat tires, trying to
put as much distance between him and the VAB as possible, make a moving target
for the missile.
Iceberg urged the
puttering buggy faster. He ducked low as he tore across the concrete parking
lot toward the sluggish water, the turning basin used for floating in empty
external tanks for the shuttle.
The huge bay doors
wouldn't allow him to move far enough out of Cueball's line of sight.
Turning, he saw the bald man swing the launcher up.
Cueball looked
through the missile launcher's sight. From this position, he had all the time
in the world. Sunlight glared off the metal of the Mobile Launcher Platform. He
shifted his aim, saw the tiny man racing away like something from a comedy
routine, and overcompensated for the distance.
He fired the missile.
The Stinger shot
forward as its propellant ignited. Startled, Cueball jerked the launcher. The
missile's heat-seeking sensor spotted the bright reflection of the sun gleaming
from the polished hull of the platform. Like a spitting cobra the Stinger spun
wild, streaking sideways, curving in a crazy arc until it slammed into the
biggest structure in the middle of the High Bay 3.
One of the stacked
solid rocket boosters.
The Stinger
detonated—and ignited 1.1 million pounds of propellant, ammonium perchlorate
oxidizer, powdered aluminum fuel, and iron oxide catalyst, designed to burn . .
. and burn hot.
The resulting
explosion was like the Challenger accident inside an enclosed building.
27
THE BRIGHT FIREBALL OF the VAB explosion spread a garish smear across the TV
screens in the viewing area. Though the speakers picked up no sound, Nicole
winced as if the boom of the incredible detonation had slammed into her.
Within seconds, though, the narrow launch windows shattered, spraying through the open metal louvers. People screamed. Mr. Phillips held up an arm to shield his face and jerked his head aside. The sound of the explosion seemed to go on and on. Then the shock wave passed, rumbling into the distance.
No one spoke.
Suddenly weak-kneed, Nicole slumped into her chair breathing heavily, sharply.
The stale, air-conditioned atmosphere inside the observation deck felt cold on
her teeth, suddenly mixing with the humid outside air that drifted in through
the broken windows. A rush of sweat made her silk blouse clammy, sticking to
her skin.
Iceberg had been in
there at the VAB, going out in a blaze of glory. Idiot! She hated him for his
impetuousness, for thinking he could handle any problem head-on and alone.
Now the Vehicle
Assembly Building was in flames, gutted in the explosion.
And worse, Iceberg
was dead.
Mr. Phillips let his
eyelids fall closed in a shudder of amazement. He dropped his arm away from his
eyes and stared at the smoke boiling from the VAB. "Exhilarating!" he
said, "but also disappointing." He turned to view Atlantis. Three
miles away from the blast, the shuttle looked unharmed.
His mouth formed a
deep scowl, etching lines around his lips. "This is really turning into a
mess . . . and it could have been so simple if you all had just followed a few
elementary instructions. If you can put a man on the moon, you should be able
to meet a simple ransom demand."
He shook his head
while staring at the flames roaring out of the mouth of the VAB as the solid
rocket fuel burned and burned. "Just look at that. I never meant to cause
such grievous damage to this wonderful facility. Think of how much this alone
will set back the space program." Mr. Phillips slapped his forehead.
"Sometimes it makes me just want to cry."
Andrei Trovkin turned
slowly from the narrow viewing window, squaring his broad shoulders and moving
like a pot coming to a boil. His fists clenched like battering rams, and his
florid face turned crimson with anger. "I could kill you, Mr.
Phillips," he said.
Feigning boredom, Mr.
Phillips replied, "Yes, and I could have you killed. But let's try
to avoid that, shall we?" He looked to Yvette, who stood lithe as a
switchblade ready to spring open. She grinned, showing perfect teeth on her
tanned face.
Standing at his
station, ignoring the roiling flames from the VAB and the broken glass
scattered on the floor around him, Senator Boorman returned to his telephone
conversation. His ponderous voice grew more
strident. He wiped the back of his hand across his
tall forehead, smearing droplets of perspiration. "If you can't help me,
then let me talk to someone who can. I'm Senator Charles Boorman!" He
punctuated each word with a pounding of his fist on the countertop.
Boorman caught Mr.
Phillips watching him. The senator calmed himself and tried to sound more
reasonable as he spoke again into the phone. "Look, the whole world is
watching. I'm only concerned for the safety of those poor crew members inside Atlantis.
Think of how this tragedy is affecting their families. Someone else might
get hurt."
Nicole tore her
attention away from the VAB fire, bristling at the senator's crocodile tears.
Mr. Phillips folded his arms. "Having problems, Senator? You
people have only two and a half hours remaining."
Boorman turned away.
His voice thinned out, becoming more of a hiss as he spoke into the phone.
"Just yank it out of next year's space program budget, for God's sake! So
what if we fly one less mission. Do you really think we'll be able to afford
another VAB anyway?" He leaned forward as if trying to climb inside the
phone.
Nicole turned back to
the conflagration on the screens, thinking of the damage. Through the smoke and
flames she could see twisted steel girders and gaping holes where the siding
had blown away. The Vehicle Assembly Building had been built with so many steel
reinforcements and pilings driven down to bedrock that the building frame had
withstood the explosion. Little short of a direct nuclear attack would destroy
the entire VAB, but it would take a great deal of time and money to refit. She
drew in a breath.
Nothing could bring
back Iceberg, though.
28
JUST AS THE HEAT-SEEKING missile struck the solid rocket boosters, Iceberg drove the
ATV headlong to the edge of the turn basin, not slowing. He flung himself off
the vehicle and dove into the questionable shelter of the sluggish water as the
shock wave belched out of the VAB. He had no place else to run, or hide. He
just hoped he could get low enough, duck the worst of the blast.
The fireball roared through the high bay of the VAB like Armageddon. Flames erupted, boiling out the huge open door. The shock wave slammed Iceberg deeper into the warm water—and he stayed under, not knowing how far the flame front would sweep.
The three-wheeled
vehicle toppled into the deep mud at the edge of the basin, as if a grizzly
bear had slapped it aside.
Iceberg stayed low in
the warm water that led to the curling waterways that connected with the Banana River. So
much for keeping his cast dry.
His ears rang from
the shock pressure. Desperately needing a breath, he felt the impact of the delayed heat wave
roll over him, singeing the short hairs on the
back of his neck.
After holding his
breath for nearly a minute, he lifted his head and gasped for breath. Hauling
himself dripping to his hands and knees on the muddy shore, he looked dully
back at the destroyed building.
Even such an
explosion was not able to flatten the massively reinforced VAB—but with more than
a million pounds of propellant inside each solid rocket booster, plus
flammables stored in the high bays, the building's interior raged in an
inferno. More than a kiloton of high explosives—and thank God he was far enough
away and underwater. Flames shot out every opening and crack, and what was left
of the side walls reverberated with the shock. Hot burning debris fluttered
down from the sky.
"And I thought
my life would get boring once I was pulled from this mission," Iceberg
muttered. He waited a few moments before he hauled himself out of the turn
basin, dripping. The three-wheeler lay on its side in the mud, and with his
injured foot he would never be able to retrieve it.
His confiscated rifle
had been submerged, and he doubted it would still function. His cast was soaked
through, and would probably begin to fall apart within an hour or so. This
whole situation wasn't turning out as well as he had hoped.
Iceberg had just
crawled back onto dry land when he heard the sound of yet another blast, from
farther away. He jerked his head up, searching for the source of the sharp
boom.
A plume of gray-black
smoke rose over the swamps not more than a mile away. Iceberg's heart froze as
he wondered what else could go wrong. The entire Kennedy Space Center had
turned into a war zone!
29
SCRAMBLED NIGHTMARES, DARK IMAGES, and weird impressions interrupted by
sudden thunder . . . The explosion was loud enough to wake the dead—or at least
someone in an abyss of drugged sleep. The noise was so tremendous, the shock
wave so sharp, and the burned chemical smell so pungent that it slashed through
tranquilized stupor and nudged Amos Friese back into semiconsciousness.
His head felt as if
it were wrapped in bandages. Each breath seemed like a slow sucking of air through a tiny
straw used to stir coffee. His arms and legs felt leaden, tingling, as if some
Pygmy had shot him with a curare-tipped blow dart. . .
Blow dart!
Amos suddenly
remembered: a scarlet dart striking him, its sharp point stinging. As he
stumbled backward, the dart poked through his bulky sweater, just pricking his
skin. He had slapped it off, but not before receiving a sufficient dose to trip
him over the cliff into a deep, unconscious paralysis.
Amos groaned, and his
voice sounded like another explosion in his head. It took him several tries
before he managed to pry his eyelids open. Gray light seeped in. He smelled
acidic smoke, chemicals burning, as if an explosive had gone off nearby.
His clothes were
clammy with perspiration, the thick sweater wrapped around him like sodden
blankets, cold from the blockhouse's excessive air-conditioning. Everything
remained fuzzy, out of focus.
He realized that he
couldn't see because his glasses had fallen off. No, not fallen off—someone had
removed them. He found them folded and neatly—lovingly?—laid on his chest. With
numb, clumsy fingers Amos unfolded the eyeglasses and settled them on his face
again, blinking until images came into focus at last.
Lying prone, he
scanned the video relay station. He spotted cracks in the cement floor that had
been painted over and sealed when the old blockhouse had been refurbished. A
black beetle toiled awkwardly across the floor.
"Oh man, oh
man," Amos said, and propped himself on one elbow. Big mistake. The motion
set off bongo drums of pain inside his skull, reminding him of a hangover he'd
once had when he went out drinking with his brother. Amos had foolishly tried
to keep up with the other fighter pilots, shot for shot—not something he wanted
to do more than once.
With the care he
usually reserved for bringing up a new computer system, Amos drew himself into
a sitting position.
"Hello?" he
croaked. "Anybody here?" He heard nothing but the hum of the air
conditioner and feedback from the many video monitors on the racks behind him.
"Cecelia?" he said.
Holding the edge of
the desk, he hauled himself up, swaying dizzily. Straightening his legs, he
heard a tiny clink on the floor. He saw a red-feathered dart attached to
a mostly full hypodermic vial of amber liquid. He had been lucky, he realized. With his
thick sweater and his own quick dodge, he had received only a partial dose.
But why had the
strangers left him here unattended? Cecelia had mentioned something about the
CIA . . . but he doubted that story.
Or were they still
around?
On his desk Amos saw
his windup orange space shuttle, his jar of jawbreakers, and the cans of now
warm Jolt Cola, just the way he had left them.
Then he spotted
Cecelia's shoes and her outstretched legs poking from behind her desk.
His heart leaped, and
adrenaline slammed him fully awake. They must have tranquilized her, too.
Weaving like a drunkard, he worked his way over to her. He held the edge of his
own desk, then grabbed a battered swivel chair that threatened to throw him off
balance again.
"Cecelia,"
he gasped, "hey, wake up." He reached her desk; then he thought again
of the two "CIA" strangers in their NASA jumpsuits . . . how nervous
Cecelia had been.
Now she lay sprawled
on the floor in her bright flower-print blouse and black slacks. Her once dusky
skin looked waxen. Another scarlet dart protruded from the flesh of her plump
neck just above the collarbone.
This time, though,
the hypodermic vial was completely empty.
Amos felt his heart
sink like a mainframe dropped in water. "Cecelia," he said again, but
his voice came out in a hoarse croak. With the remnants of dizziness from his
drugged state, and the shock of seeing her like this, his legs turned wobbly.
He knelt by Cecelia's side, propped up her head, and brushed her dark hair away
from her face. He had always wanted to run his fingers through her hair. . .
Her big brown eyes
remained closed. Amos gently touched her eyelids but received no response. Her
skin felt unnatural, like vinyl.
He put his ear next
to her nose, sensed no warm exhalation coming from her. After swallowing hard
and hesitating more from fear than embarrassment, he laid his head on her
breast, listening for a heartbeat.
He found none.
Amos sat with
Cecelia's head cradled in his lap. He kept stroking her hair, but it brought
him no pleasure. He wanted to say things to Cecelia, to ask her questions and
tell her his thoughts, things he hadn't had the nerve to do before. But no
words came.
Amos knew the two CIA
impostors must have been up to some fiendish
job. He felt anger burning through him, enough to
drive back his grief. He pictured the cocky freckle-faced redhead, and the
blond Amazon woman who had shot him with a blow dart; only through his own
blind luck had Amos averted a fatal dose of the drug himself.
But they had taken
care of Cecelia. Oh, yes, he could see that. Suddenly coming to himself, Amos
noted again the acrid smoke in the air, like gunpowder—something burning, a
sharp chemical flame. He struggled to his feet and saw daylight shining around
the blast corridor, where the bunker's heavy shield door had been closed.
He carefully
straightened Cecelia's hair, folded her arms across her ample chest, then
staggered toward the blockhouse entryway. He passed through a mazelike series
of sharp corners built of thick cinderblock designed in the Apollo days to
prevent explosive damage from penetrating into the interior.
The bunker's heavy
steel door had been twisted outward, as if some great hand had punched it from
its hinges. The cement-block walls were also chipped and cracked, smudged with
a flash of smoke.
Two burned and bloody
NASA security officers had been thrown outside, their uniforms crisped, their
entire bodies looking as if stepped on by the force of an explosion.
Someone had
booby-trapped the door. The security officers had tried to get into the video
relay bunker to rescue Amos and Cecelia—and they had triggered the bomb.
Amos's mind whirled.
"Oh, man!" he said. The pieces began to fall into place. Those two
impostors had forced Cecelia to bring them here for . . . for what? The blond
Amazon had shot both of them with a blowgun, leaving Amos for dead . . . then
the two had done something and departed, rigging explosives to take care of
anyone who came to investigate.
But the blast had
finally been enough to wake him up. "I would have preferred an alarm
clock," he said to himself.
He worked his way
back to the racks of video monitors. The heavy tranquilizer drugs still made
his mind fuzzy, but he had to get with the program—and right now.
Action! Doing anything
was better than sitting around and doing nothing. That's what his brother
would say. He knew Iceberg could have handled this problem in a cinch, but
Iceberg was out watching the launch somewhere. He probably didn't even know
anything suspicious had happened.
When Amos reached the
bank of TV screens on their metal racks, he
studied the images in shock. The chronometer showed
that Atlantis should have already launched, but the countdown had frozen
in an indefinite hold. "Oh, man."
On another screen he
stared at the smoldering exterior of the Vehicle Assembly Building. Black
flames curled out from a portion of the outer wall.
"Oh, man!"
he said again, with more energy this time.
On screens displaying
the interior of the Launch Control Center, all the firing-floor technicians
stood helpless beside their stations, upset, confused—and finally on the image
of the VIP observation deck Amos saw Nicole Hunter, indignant and frustrated
beside a short but suave-looking man. With them stood the blond Amazon and the
cocky redhead, both of whom carried ominous weapons, holding the LCC hostage.
Definitely not CIA.
Amos turned cold.
Fumbling, he picked up the phone and punched 9 for an outside line, intending
to call 911. But he heard no dial tone. The line was dead. He tried it again.
Still nothing. Running his hands over his panel that controlled the relay
lines, he flicked a switch. An LED display blinked: all outside transmissions
had been cut off.
Amos slumped back in
his groaning old chair. Cecelia dead, himself attacked, the video blockhouse
booby-trapped, the VAB in flames, and terrorists with guns strutting through
the Launch Control Center.
"Oh, man—oh,
man!" he said.
He got momentarily
frightened. "What if they come back for me?"
And where was
Iceberg?
30
ATLANTIS
GATOR GREEN, LYING ON his back in the pilot's chair and facing the sky, was
looking out of the front-side viewing port when he saw a reflection of bright
light out of the corner of his eye. Scrambling up, he leaned across the center
console C-3 and looked out Franklin's small side viewport. His helmet bounced
from his lap, but he paid it no attention.
"Holy shit!
Would you look at that!" A brilliant fireball spat from the cube-shaped building,
gushing through the VAB high-bay door. A purple afterimage blurred his vision.
Marc Franklin had
unstrapped himself and sat on the aft bulkhead with his arms crossed over his
orange pressure suit, squatting on the cockpit wall; while the shuttle remained
upright on the gantry, it was difficult to look at anything but the open sky
above. Alexandra Koslovsky had leaned over the side of her chair to speak down
to her comrades on the mid-deck.
The two American
payload specialists on the mid-deck, Major Arlan Burns and Dr. Frank Purvis,
reacted the same instant Gator blinked from the light. Burns yelled,
"Unbelievable! What's going on out there? Look out the side port—you can
just see it around the gantry structure."
Gator tried to blink
the afterimage away to focus better on the VAB. The red-and-yellow fireball
coughed out of the bay doors, and thick black smoke swirled up into the air.
Franklin climbed over
and pushed Gator aside for a better view. Alexandra Koslovsky crowded up,
standing on her tiptoes to look around the mission commander.
The shuttle vibrated,
and a muffled boom rattled the spacecraft as the dissipated blast wave hit
them. The shuttle shuddered in its yoke. Taken off guard, Franklin and
Alexandra stumbled from their precarious balance at the viewport. Gator reached
out to keep the two from falling.
Burns climbed forward
and stuck his head through the deck access port. "What the hell is going
on? We just had an explosion at the VAB!"
Finally acting like a
leader, Franklin turned around and snapped to Gator, "Get on the Guard
frequency, Lieutenant Commander. Find out what's going on. Follow the
checklist."
"Probably the
terrorists Iceberg warned us about," Gator said, dead serious. The NASA simulator
instructors would hand out unanticipated problems on "green cards,"
trying to rattle the crew. Some astronauts could handle it without a checklist,
and others, like Franklin, needed a checklist whenever they ran out of toilet
paper.
But this wasn't any
green card.
Burns ducked back
down into the mid-deck; the payload specialists excitedly spoke with their
Russian counterparts. Alexandra knelt on the bulkhead to consult with her
comrades below.
Gator was already on
the comm channel, trying to get a response from either CAPCOM or the LCC, but
no one answered. Gator punched in another frequency, but the LCC took forever to answer.
Gator blinked in astonishment at the gruff, frightened response from one of the
station chiefs on the firing floor. "Atlantis, we have a situation
here. Unable to provide details. LCC out."
"Hey, at least
let me talk to the Launch Director. This is Lieutenant Commander Green—"
"Ms. Hunter is
unavailable at this time. You will be advised. Out."
Alexandra Koslovsky straightened from the mid-deck as Orlov,
her gangly Russian cosmonaut partner, climbed up into the shuttle's command
deck. They chattered quickly in Russian.
"Okay, Launch
Control is assessing the problem," Franklin said, as if the transmission
had explained everything. "We need to wait until they make a
recommendation. Nothing we can—"
Gator felt
exasperated, turning from the radio. "It's not right, Commander. Launch
Control should be yammering at the top of their lungs. We're out of touch with
CAPCOM in Houston. They're keeping us in the dark, and it's no accident! What's
all this baloney about staying off the air and not asking any questions?"
Franklin climbed back
toward his commander's seat. "We were ordered to sit tight." He
stubbornly grabbed for his heavy-duty seatbelt.
"And Iceberg
directly informed us that the LCC had been taken over by a bunch of thugs.
Dammit, Franklin—the VAB just blew up, for Christ's sake! And Nicole won't even
respond. Panther, remember? And she's one of us!"
From his partially
obstructed view, Gator strained to see any movement around the launch area or
the VAB, but it was weirdly still. Flames licked at the blackened exterior of
the building, and smoke rose high into the air. No fire crews, no rescue
vehicles, no NASA Security.
"Franklin,
think! If this was an ordinary launch, people would be going bananas!"
"Give it time.
It's only been a few minutes since the explosion—"
"And nothing has
happened. That in itself should be telling us to act." He stepped up,
weary of Franklin's indecision. Mission Commander or not, there came a time
when action and not words made the difference. Gator's eyes shone bright as his
own fear pumped him higher. "Iceberg was right. Launch Control has been
compromised, and we're hostages here in the shuttle. I have no intention of
being a bargaining chip for some wacko—not if I can help it. I think we need to
get the hell out of Dodge."
"Excuse
please?" said Alexandra.
Cosmonaut Orlov said, "I believe I
understand Comrade Gator—"
As Franklin looked at
him in astonished disbelief, Gator started for the mid-deck hatch. "Hit
the emergency exit baskets. We're sitting on a couple of kilotons of
explosives, boys and girls, and I'm not staying around any longer to debate.
Launch Control is totally FUBAR."
Small, relieved
cheers rang out from the payload specialists on the mid-deck below.
"Emergency egress—it's about time somebody made a decision up there!"
Burns stuck his head through the hatch.
Alexandra frowned.
"FUBAR?"
"Fucked-Up
Beyond All Recognition," Gator translated. "What do they teach you in
your English classes? Come on, we're ready to egress."
"Apparently not
American English," Alexandra snorted as she started to follow.
Franklin caught
Gator's arm as the shuttle pilot made for the hatch. "This terrorist story
hasn't been confirmed. We have to make sure we're doing the right thing."
"Commander
Iceberg would not lie to us," Alexandra said with unshakeable confidence.
Franklin nervously
wet his lips and looked around the command deck for a checklist. His stoic
demeanor started to crack. "Wait, I'll inform Launch Control that unless
we hear from them—"
Alexandra slipped
past Gator and made her way through the access hatch to the mid-deck. Sounds
came from below as the rest of the crew ran through the egress checklist.
Gator positioned
himself above the hatch and said, "Marc, if we tip our hand, we're
screwed. Let those terrorists figure it out for themselves."
Franklin persisted as
Gator disappeared down the hatch to the mid-deck. "But what if Iceberg is
wrong? This is just the kind of stunt—"
Gator looked at him,
hard as ebony. "If there aren't any terrorists, Launch Control will start
squawking the moment we open the hatch. At least we'll get them off their fat
asses and spark some reaction."
71
KENNEDY SPACE
CENTER
RESTRICTED
LAUNCH AREA
ICEBERG GRITTED HIS TEETH and tried to push away the thudding agony. “Keep
cool," he said to himself, then hissed as a spang of pain shot through his
broken bones grinding together. Chill . . . frosty . . . The mental litany
seemed to be losing its effect
Iceberg skipped on
his good foot and barely touched the ground with his wet cast as he staggered
away from the burning VAB. Keep moving head off for the next target, gotta
help. . .
Even in the mid-morning sun, he could see a second shadow cast in front of him from the
flames. Slimy water from the turning basin dripped from his clothes.
Time to move on
before the bad guys threw something else at him. He sure as hell hated to walk
across the sprawling swampy site, but the three-wheeler lay submerged in the
mud of the turn basin. He couldn't very well hitchhike.
With a sinking
feeling, Iceberg wondered how much longer he had to do all this alone. Where
was NASA Security? He turned toward the far-off launchpad and debated if he
should try to help his crew first. Or Nicole. He felt overwhelmed. He couldn't
do everything!
"Chill
out," he said to himself. "Chill." His heart continued to pound,
and the adrenaline scattered his concentration rather than focusing it.
Iceberg knew his
crew, knew how they worked together, how much they had trained, each with their
mission specialties and areas of research interest—but while the other six had
their separate duties on the flight of Atlantis, they'd had to learn
teamwork as well. And his crew was tight, like the strings on a well-tuned
guitar.
Astronauts and cosmonauts had enjoyed
running the obstacle courses in the training areas in the Johnson Space Center
in Texas, getting themselves ready for their flight. Alexandra Koslovsky had
established a friendly rivalry between the Russians and Americans, running
their paces through the grueling course. Gator Green whipped Burns and Purvis
into shape, while Alexandra pushed the two Russian mission specialists to beat
them. Iceberg, as commander, swore that he could surpass the best marks of
either team.
Yes, he could trust
them to perform well together—but he also couldn't just leave them alone. He
had the world's biggest smoke signal going off behind him at the VAB, so Gator
knew something was definitely not right. Even Franklin would have gotten it
through his thick head by now.
Iceberg grasped
Mory's battered assault rifle and hobbled along the damp, thick grass beside
the gravel tracks of the crawlerway. The pain from his foot lanced through him
like a son of a bitch every time he stepped down on his softening cast. He
winced, but kept going away from the burning VAB. He heard only the distant
crackle of fire, and no NASA fire engines.
About a million miles
away, he spotted the Armored Personnel Carrier in the vicinity of the shuttle
complex. At least Gator and the rest of the crew would be helped by the rescue
team if they took his advice and evacuated the shuttle. The astronauts could scramble out
and use the emergency baskets; the APC would meet them at the blast shelters
and whisk them away from the launch area.
But why wasn't the
APC responding to the VAB fire? All emergency crews should have been rushing to
the huge facility. Surely every military and security installation in Florida
would be aware of what was going on; NASA had agreements with all the military
bases for security support. Mr. Phillips had made his ransom demand for the
whole nation to see. And the VAB explosion had provided a signal no one could
ignore. The smoke would have been seen for miles around on the flat swamplands,
from the press stands, from the state highways.
Yes, Iceberg thought,
it would only be a matter of time before the cavalry arrived. But he had never
been one to sit around waiting. Trying to ignore his pain, he speeded up his
pace.
32
ATLANTIS GANTRY
OKAY, KIDDOS," GATOR GREEN said. "Ready for emergency egress.
This is it—no turning back." He gripped the handle on the shuttle's hatch
and positioned himself for better leverage. With Atlantis pointed
upright on the launch-pad, he stood on the mid-deck bulkhead, using the
cockpit's back wall as the floor.
"Go ahead and do
it," Franklin ordered, still sounding skeptical. "Our butts are going
to be in a sling if you're wrong about this, Lieutenant Commander—but while I'm here
we may as well make it a textbook evacuation."
Gator turned the
manual handle of the orbiter's thick door, bypassing the automatic systems. All
indicator lights around the hatch burned a steady green. He grunted as he
pressed the handle. The turning
mechanism gave a little, then stuck. He felt a sudden chill. Great—now what? He
strained against the handle until it moved with a sudden jerk and then spun
freely. He pushed the shuttle's hatch open wide.
Automatic alarms
shrieked, drowning out the creaking and snapping of super chilled metal of the
external tank and the low rumbling of the gantry hydraulics.
"So much for
sneaking out unnoticed," Gator yelled over the din. He motioned for Burns
and Purvis to exit first. "Let's go, guys!"
Behind him, Franklin
waved the two mission specialists through the thirty-inch hatch. "Lead the
way—the cosmonauts will follow. By the numbers, hustle!"
Burns ducked, grabbed
the edge, and pushed himself out. The White Room chamber at the end of the
access arm was still attached to the hatch.
"Go, go,
go!" screamed Gator. "Come on, it's not a fashion show!"
Purvis followed next,
bounding through the hatch without touching it.
Gator gestured for
the two Russian payload specialists. Orlov and his partner moved with
astonishing grace in their orange pressure suits; they reached the White Room
before Alexandra even moved up to the hatch. She stooped in front of the hatch,
looking flustered.
Just what they
needed—a traffic jam at the emergency exit. "Get moving." Though
smaller in stature than the muscular female cosmonaut, Gator picked Alexandra
up and shoved her through.
Franklin gripped
Gator's elbow and tried to urge him on. "I'll take the rear. Commander's
privilege."
Gator shook off the
shuttle commander's arm. "Experience counts, Franklin. For God's sake,
don't try to be a hero—get going."
Franklin started to
protest. "I'm the commander, dammit."
"No reason to go
down with the ship. I've gone over this drill a dozen more times than you, sir.
Now get your butt in gear."
Franklin looked as
though he were going to continue protesting, but instead he closed his mouth
and ducked through the hatch. Gator followed, slipping into the connected White
Room chamber. So far so good.
If the creeps had
waited another few minutes into the countdown before forcing a halt, the walkway itself
would have pulled back cutting off the emergency baskets. Then the Atlantis crew
would have really been held hostage. As he sprinted down the access arm, Gator
thanked God
for small errors.
Then he froze at the
sight of a gantry surveillance camera.
Their every move was
being broadcast back to Launch Control. And presumably the watching terrorists
as well.
33
THE AUTOMATED SURVEILLANCE CAMERAS on the gantry of launchpad 39A showed Atlantis's
emergency egress hatch popping open. Sensor alarms sounded on the firing
floor, sending the trapped engineers and technicians into greater agitation.
Mr. Phillips looked
up, startled. Lights blinked red at monitor stations; status symbols reported
the unexpected occurrence. This wasn’t supposed to be happening, and he found
it most annoying, after all the other troubles he had encountered.
"Hey, what's
that?" Rusty said. He turned and shouted, "Mr. Phillips, you'd better
see this."
On the monitor, the
shuttle astronauts, clothed in orange pressure suits, emerged from the
orbiter's hatch, climbing through the White Room chamber onto the gantry
structure. They moved carefully but efficiently, one at a time, like kids in a
fire drill. One by one the astronauts sprinted from the access hatch. The
mounted surveillance cameras could not track the figures, but the crewmembers
proceeded with a clear sense of urgency.
Since they had not
queried the LCC for further instructions before popping the emergency hatch,
their actions took Mr. Phillips by surprise. He had expected them to be a bit
more obedient. "Ms. Hunter, I thought you told those astronauts to stay in
place." He straightened his tie, waiting for her response.
Nicole shook her
head, struggling to keep a smug smile off her face. "These are highly
trained astronauts, and they have minds of their own. No matter how much you
planned to keep them in the dark, they could see the explosion at the
VAB. They know something is definitely wrong, and it's not surprising
that they might respond to a changed situation. You couldn't expect them to
stay put without giving them any more information."
"Ah, but I
can." Mr. Phillips smoothed his jacket. Control. I have to keep
control. His mind spun through the possibilities, seeing options clearly
defined like numbers on a stock-price sheet. Times like these separated the
great men from the good.
He flipped open his
PDA again, looking at decision trees, contingencies he had outlined on the flow
chart of the morning's caper. Two hours left, and he expected to have a king's
ransom in his hand.
Years ago he had
discovered the intoxicating beauty of cold logic, sound reasoning . . . and its
tremendous rewards. He had been forced to bury his feelings then, and do the
logical thing; it had hurt at the time, but the lesson he had learned that
stark December day in Connecticut, walking away from the mass of IV lines,
wires, pumps, and breathing tubes after switching them off had brought him his
rightful fortune from his pathetic mother. Just as this decision would bring
him an even greater treasure.
He closed his eyes as
he gathered strength from his own convictions. He snapped them open.
"Though those astronauts are true national heroes, they are half of my
collateral . . . and letting them go simply won't do."
He picked up the
walkie-talkie and tuned to a specific frequency, punching the "talk"
button. "Jacques, this is Mr. Phillips. Are you still in position at the
APC?"
After a quick burst
of static, Jacques acknowledged, "I am here, Monsieur Phillips."
On the other side of
the observation deck, Yvette's water-blue eyes narrowed at the mention of her
lover. Mr. Phillips drew his mouth tight. The . . . ravenous devotion of
those two to each other was incomprehensible to him—as was any amount of deep
affection. But then he himself had not been through the hard lives the two
magnificently beautiful specimens had endured. What they did in their private
hours was none of his business. Yvette and Jacques had never let him down when
it counted, and they had gambled everything on his being able to pull off this
one caper.
"What are you
planning to do?" Nicole Hunter asked. Her voice had a hysterical edge.
"Please reconsider—"
Mr. Phillips popped
another breath mint into his mouth, ignoring her. "Jacques, would you be
so kind as to take out your rifle and explain to the Atlantis crew
that we don't wish for them to leave at this point."
Mr. Phillips could
imagine the young blond grinning from ear to ear. "Oui, Monsieur
Phillips. I understand. Guaranteed bull's-eye."
Four astronauts had
already emerged from the crew compartment. They hustled away from the shuttle
hatch, crossing the gantry access arm over to the emergency escape baskets.
Seconds later Mr. Phillips saw the Belorussian gymnast Alexandra Koslovsky, the
grim-faced mission commander Marc Franklin, then the dark, wiry form of the
pilot Vick Green hurrying across the metal framework high above the ground.
The Russian liaison,
Andrei Trovkin, watched the beautiful cosmonaut standing on the gantry. The
ambassador's face grew florid as he lunged to his feet. "I will not allow
you to harm her—"
Yvette moved with
sinuous grace and amazing speed. In an instant she stood behind the
broad-shouldered ambassador with her hand gripped around her razor-edged brass
knuckles. She used the side of her fist to pound on the base of Trovkin's neck,
careful to keep the shark-tooth blades from slicing his skin, but enough to
send him crashing back into his chair, stunned.
"Please remain
seated, Monsieur," Yvette said, narrowing her empty ice-blue eyes. "Merci."
Mr. Phillips looked
oddly at the Russian liaison, puzzled at the sudden outburst; then he glanced
back to the TV, noting the slender blond cosmonaut. He thought he remembered a
certain detail, something that might be advantageous for later. With rapid
strokes of the blunt stylus, he checked his Personal Data Assistant, calling up
the file on Alexandra Koslovsky.
"Ah, I see it
now, Ambassador Trovkin. So those rumors about you and Comrade Koslovsky must
be true. Too bad." Mr. Phillips turned to Yvette as the Russian liaison
sat seething but helpless in his pain. "Yvette, my dear, I just hope your
precious Jacques doesn't miss his shots and hit the hydrogen tank
instead."
Yvette's nostrils
flared in indignation. "Jacques is an expert sharpshooter, Monsieur
Phillips. He will hit the target, nothing else."
"I suppose we've
already had our quota of mistakes for today," Mr. Phillips said dryly.
"I'm sure the rest of our plan will come off without a hitch."
34
BREATHING HARDER AS HE struggled overland, Iceberg kept his gaze fixed toward his
goal—the launchpad. His crew. His shuttle. He saw helicopters hovering on the
horizon, security forces held at bay.
Distant alarms sounded on the gantry, and he recognized the emergency evacuation signals, loud blasts used only when the crew intended to make a rapid and unplanned escape from the launchpad.
Good, Gator had
finally gotten the message. At least somebody was listening.
He passed a line of
low Georgia pines and wild palmettos to spot the rescue Armored Personnel
Carrier, at its assigned station only a few hundred yards away. Just sitting
there! Why wasn't the APC rumbling toward the launchpad right now, if the
astronauts were attempting to evacuate? Dammit, that was the vehicle's sole
purpose for being there! The APC crew could roll into action faster than he
could with a broken foot and a soggy cast.
Before he could call
attention to himself, though, the armored hatch popped open. A lone figure rose
out of the interior, unaware of Iceberg's presence as he withdrew a
sharpshooter's rifle and braced it on the top of the vehicle. The guy was
dressed in a sand-colored camouflage outfit, nonregulation. He stood
silhouetted against the yellow-splotched APC like a jet flying across a full
moon. He had broad shoulders, white-blond hair that dazzled in the sunlight,
and tanned skin.
As Iceberg crouched
down into the foliage in disbelief, he watched the uniformed man adjust something
at one end of the rifle—a telescopic sight? The blond swung his professional
weapon in a slow one-eighty in front, then another full arc to the rear,
scanning the area around the shuttle.
Iceberg dropped to
the underbrush, hitting his already bruised hands and digging Mory's battered
automatic rifle into his shoulder. He bit back the pain. Must be another
terrorist! This Phillips character had his people everywhere, swarming like
cockroaches.
A roll of sweat
formed on Iceberg's forehead. He had to do something, and do it fast.
"Cool it," he said to himself like a prayer. "Chill out."
But the words no longer gave him strength.
The APC was probably
the terrorists' safety valve—a last-ditch defense against any NASA security
forces sneaking into the restricted launch area. The blond-haired thug probably
had standing orders to take out the shuttle if the astronauts tried to escape.
The terrorist had only to fire one well-placed shot into Atlantis'?, external
tank, and the resulting inferno would make the VAB explosion look like amateur
night on the Fourth of July.
Iceberg knew he was
too far away to get in a good shot with his commandeered assault rifle—he
couldn't count on his own accuracy anyway, not with his battered and bedraggled
condition. Besides, astronauts
weren't chosen
for their target-shooting abilities. He just wished he had one of those
Sidewinder missiles he used to shoot when he was flying F-15s.
He had to stop the
sniper some other way. Iceberg felt his stomach go sour. Cool. . . chill. . .
frosty . . . Yeah, right. Gritting his teeth from the pain in his hands, he
pushed up, the decision made. If he kept quiet he could sneak up on the APC . .
. he hoped. Move fast, move quiet.
Holding his rifle
steady with one hand, he crouched and sprinted for the armored vehicle,
tripping through the creepers and thick bushes that played hell with his broken
foot, snagging on the wet, clammy cast. He just hoped the moon boot support
would hold up long enough for him to do what he had to do.
Iceberg followed the
winding track of an overgrown dirt road and the trampled path the APC had
crushed on its way into position. He had at least two hundred yards to
cover—and no telling how much time. His foot hurt, big-time, but unless he kept
moving, his broken bones would be the least of his worries.
Far away, the
astronauts continued their evacuation routine, small figures in the distance,
high up on the gantry.
The sniper settled
down into the APC, keeping only his head and rifle in view out of the armored
hatch. He sighted in the shuttle—and fired.
35
ATLANTIS
GATOR RACED DOWN THE crew access arm, leaving the White Room chamber behind him. With
the emergency alarms going off and the surveillance camera covering their
escape, he didn't want to guess what the terrorists might do.
The crew had to get to the emergency egress baskets and reach safety.
Purvis and Burns had
already climbed in the baskets aligned at the edge of the fixed launch structure. Each of
the five two-person baskets hung from a long
wire that stretched twelve hundred feet down to a wide-mesh catch net and
blast-shielded emergency bunker.
"Go, go!"
Gator yelled as he ran, waving his arms for the two mission specialists to get
going. "Just think of it as an amusement park ride!"
Burns didn't look up
as he braced himself against the dangling basket. "Hit it!"
Purvis smashed his
arm down on the release lever. The basket jerked once, then started trundling
down the long cable with a growing whine, picking up speed.
Marc Franklin stood
ready to help the two Russian payload specialists; they scrambled aboard the
next basket in line even as Burns and Purvis slid out of sight. The Russian's
basket lurched once and started sliding down the wire. Orlov let out a loud,
ridiculous whoop as they sped off to safety.
Franklin reached the
third basket just before Alexandra Koslovsky. He started to get in but stopped
and turned to Gator. "Hurry—you take this one."
Then Gator heard the sound of a bullet ping
against the metal of the gantry. Another bullet whizzed by, slicing through
the air.
"Somebody's
using us for target practice!" Gator said. His heart clawed up his throat.
If a bullet hit the external tank, the whole launchpad would be consumed by a
million pounds of explosive fuel. "Just get on!" he yelled. "I'm
right behind you—I'll ride solo."
At the bottom, the
first basket slammed into the netting, throwing Purvis free with the impact.
Burns managed to hold on; then he scrambled out to drop beside his fellow
mission specialist. As the second basket crashed into the wobbly net, the first
two astronauts struggled to open the emergency bunker.
From above, Franklin
looked around, confused by the echoing gunfire. He started to climb into the
basket, then stopped, turning to yell a question back at Gator.
Alexandra, racing
full-out, tried to stop her forward momentum as Franklin hesitated getting into
the basket. They collided. Seventy pounds lighter than the shuttle commander,
Alexandra bounced back. She tried to get her footing but slipped. Her leg slid
underneath the lower railing guard that ran along the walkway.
As she tried to get
up, a look of terror crossed her face. "I cannot move!"
Gator crawled on the
metal gantry walkway, trying to duck from the ricocheting bullets. "Are
you all right?"
She strained to move.
"I am stuck."
He knelt to examine
her foot. Alexandra had somehow slipped under the metal railing at the edge of
the access arm. Her slender foot was caught between criss-crossed metal bars.
If her foot had only been bigger, it could not have pushed through. From the
angle at which she lay, it looked impossible to get her out.
Another bullet
ricocheted around the fixed metal structure. Gator flinched instinctively.
Franklin crouched down beside them, out of breath, his eyes wide. He looked
wildly around. "Let's go—the shots are coming from the APC below."
Finally he noticed Alexandra's twisted position on the metal walkway.
"She's
stuck." Gator tried pushing up on her foot, but Alexandra winced. They had
to get out of there, and get out now. He looked at the cosmonaut. "Can you
turn your leg?"
Alexandra grimaced and tried to reposition herself. She pushed up
on her hands but was unable to turn. She shook her head. "I cannot move at
all."
"Okay, we'll
turn you." Gator motioned to Franklin. "Pick her up."
"We'll be
targets, plain as day!"
"Shut up and
help me lift, Commander," ordered Gator. "We've got to get her foot
free."
Gator reached under
Alexandra's arms. Franklin positioned himself at her torso. Gator said,
"One, two, lift." Alexandra was light, but with her foot stuck
awkwardly under the metal railing, it was unwieldy to lift her. "Now
rotate her this way."
Alexandra's clenched
lips turned white, but she didn't cry out for them to stop. They just about had
her in a position where her foot could come free when another bullet clanged
against the superstructure.
"Hurry!" Franklin said, hunching
down, nearly losing his grip.
Gator stood up to get
in better position when something spun him around. The impact was like a plane
crash. It felt as if someone had shoved a hot needle into his back or his side
... or somewhere. Alexandra slipped out of his arms. He staggered back and
opened his mouth—then another bullet hit him.
Gator felt himself
falling. Even the floor of the gantry seemed very far away, and surrounded in
blackness.
36
ON ONE OF THE TV monitors in the VIP observation deck, Nicole watched the
orange-suited form of Gator Green jerk like a marionette twitched by an
epileptic puppeteer. The shuttle pilot crumpled to the metal walkway as Marc
Franklin dove for cover. Gator lay motionless on the gantry, his body obscured
by the metal framework
Nicole gasped in
shock. She felt so damned isolated and ineffective here. She whirled to snap at
Mr. Phillips. "You bastard! You could have let me talk—
The little man
ignored her and slicked back his hair, then turned to the news cameramen, who
kept their lenses trained on the LCC hostages. "Replacing a good pilot is
going to be difficult, but luckily the crew is cross trained."
Alexandra Koslovsky
struggled where she lay trapped in the superstructure. Even in the silent video
image, a bright puff of ricochet showed that gunfire continued to pelt the
gantry.
Nicole controlled
herself, trying to think of something, anything, that might help. "Look,
if you want your little treasure chest full of diamonds, you'd better start
showing some good faith. Call off your sniper. Tell him to stop shooting."
Mr. Phillips raised
an eyebrow. "Perhaps I'll consider it. Can you get the remaining
astronauts back in the shuttle?"
Nicole swallowed,
knowing the crew was completely out of contact. Gator had been shot—if he
wasn't dead already, he needed medical help. Only Franklin and Koslovsky
remained on the gantry.
Mr. Phillips squinted
down at the monitor as Alexandra struggled to free herself. Franklin crawled
over and tried to help her, though he seemed torn between leaving for the
escape basket and freeing the trapped Belorussian. A bright shot spanged from
the metal less than a foot away from Alexandra's head.
"Oh my, that was
a close one," Mr. Phillips said. "But no points for a near
miss." He raised his eyebrow, as if expecting laughter from the audience.
Instead, it finally
triggered Ambassador Andrei Trovkin to act.
The burly, nearsighted
Russian had remained silent since his pummeling by Yvette, apparently cowed.
Now, he took everyone by surprise. His face scarlet with rage, Trovkin lunged
out of his chair and collided with Mr. Phillips like a steel wrecking ball.
"You will die first, little man!" he bellowed in his thick Russian
accent.
Trovkin grappled Mr.
Phillips to the floor. He sledge-hammered a fist into the other man's stomach,
causing the Personal Data Assistant to clatter out of his pocket.
Yvette had already
swung into action.
In less than a second
the lithe blond woman was across the room, her arms literally ripping Andrei
Trovkin from Mr. Phillips as if gravity had been turned off.
Nicole leaped into
motion, trying to cross the four steps to Trovkin, but time seemed to slow
down. "No!" she shouted. "Wait!"
Yvette slammed the
Russian liaison to the floor, knocking one of the rolling chairs away. Digging
a knee into the small of his back, she grabbed Trovkin's square chin with her
left hand and dragged his head upward. He struggled, but with a flash of speed,
Yvette drew her other fist across his throat—the fist bearing the shark-toothed
knuckle blade. Nicole couldn't get there in time.
Yvette sliced so
quickly that very little blood even stuck to the razor teeth, but a fan of
arterial scarlet sprayed out, bright and foamy. Trovkin's thick neck suddenly
gave, as if it had grown an extra hinge. He choked, his arms and legs still
twitching and writhing, trying to throw the big woman off him even in the last
moments of his life.
Mr. Phillips
staggered back to his feet, coughing and trying to regain his composure. He
looked in disgust at the blood that had splashed onto his jacket as he brushed
himself off.
Yvette stood up from
her twitching victim, breathing hard. "That will teach you to behave,
Monsieur Trovkin," she panted.
The Russian reached
out a bloody hand, but then his fingers curled together. Trovkin's dark eyes
blazed at her from behind his askew black-rimmed glasses, still glaring even as
they dulled in death.
Nicole dropped to her
knees beside the dying ambassador. Everything had happened so fast. She had
been negotiating, perhaps even getting Mr. Phillips to concede, to call off the
sniper fire on the crew—but then Trovkin had acted. Though she doubted she
could have done anything, Nicole still cursed herself for her brief hesitation.
She had lost her
edge. If this had been an emergency on a shuttle mission, she could never
afford such a delay. A reluctant pause could be fatal for her entire crew—as it
had just proved fatal to the cosmonaut liaison.
Senator Boorman
looked short of breath, letting the phone dangle in his hand. He loosened his
tie and opened his collar, swallowing repeatedly. "My God," he whispered.
"He was the Russian liaison!" Boorman sounded as if he had suddenly
just realized the fact. "That man was my responsibility."
Mr. Phillips whirled
and snapped at him. "Senator Boorman, this isn't a committee action.
Shouldn't you be making more phone calls? Get some wheeling and dealing going
here, log rolling, calling in favors! Start ransacking a few jewelers'
warehouses. The government can obtain whatever it needs in the name of national
security."
Boorman jerked as if
he had been slapped. He looked to Nicole as if she might provide the answer for him. His
face grew slack as if suddenly aware this was not a back-room deal that he
could dominate. He turned back to the phone and began dialing.
Sniffing, brushing
the front of his jacket, Mr. Phillips picked up his PDA from the floor and
flipped open the lid to make sure the device still functioned properly. He
tapped the LCD screen with one fingernail, then smiled in satisfaction.
Then he rubbed at the
dark red wetness soaking into the fine fabric of his jacket. "Now where am
I going to get this cleaned?" He looked down at the body of Andrei
Trovkin. "Why can't everyone just follow the rules?"
Nicole could see
perspiration on Mr. Phillips's forehead. She kept chastising herself for being
unable to save the situation. Trovkin had been very much like Iceberg, charging
in headfirst without thinking, solving problems by brute force rather than
finesse. The Russian had died for pursuing that way of solving problems, as
Iceberg had died in the conflagration of the VAB.
But Nicole's calmer,
more personal approach had proven just as ineffective. Her negotiations hadn't
succeeded either, and now another person had been killed. At least Trovkin and
Iceberg had tried.
Mr. Phillips turned
to Yvette. "Move our Russian friend over by Mr. Channel Seven." He
glanced around, focusing on Nicole, as if all this were somehow her fault. And,
as Launch Director, it was her fault—just as the captain of a ship was
responsible for the actions of an entire crew.
Yvette dragged the
burly cosmonaut liaison's body over against the bloodied corpse of the
cameraman. She moved purposefully, as if gaining some erotic excitement out of
it.
Mr. Phillips shook
his head in disappointment. "Before long, we're not going to have room to
store all the bodies unless you people come to your senses."
37
ICEBERG DUCKED BEHIND THE shelter of creepers and low Georgia pine, ready to make a
limping, agonizing dash the last hundred yards to the Armored Personnel
Carrier.
"Oh, great," Iceberg breathed. He felt a pounding in his eardrums as the pressure built within him. He heard the sharp crack of rifle fire, and again, and again—expecting to hear the roar of the shuttle exploding at any moment.
On the distant
gantry, Iceberg saw the astronauts scrambling into the emergency escape baskets,
the first two away like hang-glider projectiles along the long cables. Even
from this distance he could hear a bullet's thin ricochet against the Fixed
Service Structure.
Luckily, the noise of
the gunfire covered Iceberg's own movements, and he plunged forward at a
half-run, hopping on his good foot and lightly touching the ground with his
softening cast. Shards of pain ran up his leg. "Hold on just a little
longer," he muttered to himself. "And I promise not to walk for a
month."
He swung his
commandeered rifle free with his raw right hand, still too far away to get a
good shot at the sniper. Any botched attempt to shoot from here would only
result in the sniper's turning his weapon on Iceberg.
He had to get in
closer before his entire crew was massacred. He gritted his teeth at the agony
as he lunged forward. It felt as if his leg might give way any second, and he
had no way of numbing the pain.
The sniper leaning
out of the hatch of the mottled yellow APC seemed immensely pleased with
himself as he took aim at Atlantis. He was big and muscular, larger than
Iceberg. His tanned skin seemed a stark contrast to his blond-white hair. The
man took his time, squinting through the rifle's telescopic sight. He squeezed
off two more rounds in succession. A coward shooting helpless people from a
distance.
Hustling in his
agonizing crippled run, Iceberg saw that two of the escape baskets had slammed
into the catch-nets and four crewmembers had already scrambled toward the
emergency bunker. Maybe they would make it! "Go, you guys—go!"
But his elation was
short-lived. The sniper aimed at the high gantry again, squinted for an endless
moment through his telescopic sight, and squeezed off another round. The crack
of the rifle sounded like a baseball bat hitting a home run.
One of the three
remaining astronauts on the access arm spun around, thrown backward. From this
distance Iceberg could make out only that the orange-suited astronaut was
small, wiry, with dark skin. Gator!
The sniper fired
again. The wounded pilot staggered and fell to the metal grating as the others
scrambled for cover.
Iceberg saw red,
wanting to howl in rage, but somehow he prevented himself from crying out. Like
a battering ram, he plowed over the last small rise, across the low wet grass.
Streaks of pain raced up his leg like broken glass on fire, but he canceled it.
Not now. Sweat rolled off his forehead in the thick mid-morning humidity.
A walkie-talkie at
the sniper's waist spoke a series of clear words in a cultured voice Iceberg
recognized from Mr. Phillips's announcement on the TV monitor. "Jacques,
report please. How is our problem progressing?"
The sharpshooter
reached down to depress the "talk" button. "One down, Monsieur
Phillips. I will take out the elevator power box so they have no other way to
get up or down from the gantry. But please excuse me for now. Jacques
out."
On the APC, the
sniper, Jacques, leaned forward for another shot.
Reacting more in
anger than as cool, detached machinery, Iceberg swept up his automatic rifle as
he staggered to a halt. He leveled his weapon and took aim. "Take this,
asshole," Iceberg whispered through clenched teeth. He jammed his swollen
finger on the trigger. It clicked—
Nothing happened. The
battered rifle wouldn't fire.
Iceberg yanked the
trigger twice, then another time in anger, but the weapon had failed him.
38
ATLANTIS GANTRY
BULLETS WHIZZED THROUGH THE air over Dr. Marc Franklin's head. One
projectile ricocheted off a thin metal crossbar and bounced against steel
girders, passing so close he swore he felt
the hot wind of its passage. Another bullet struck
and penetrated the elevator power box with a spang.
Sparks flew from the severed electrical wiring.
Cosmonaut Koslovsky remained trapped in the
gantry walkway, twisted in an awkward position from where she had fallen. Her
face rippled with pain from her caught foot. She was out in the open, without
cover, another helpless target for the terrorist sniper.
Lieutenant Commander
Green lay bleeding, motionless. Leaving Koslovsky and Green, Franklin crawled
over to the remaining two emergency baskets, hoping against hope that some
technician might have strapped a first-aid kit somewhere. Above him, the
remaining two baskets rattled as the long cables thrummed from when the first
four crewmembers had successfully slid down. At least the others had made it to
the ground and out of harm's way.
Franklin found no
first-aid kit, spotting nothing but a small fire extinguisher. Fire
extinguisher? Probably placed there to fulfill the requirements of some obscure
OSHA rule. The bureaucrats could always plead innocent by following the book,
nothing more and nothing less. Just as Franklin himself had always done.
But following the
book just might get him killed in this instance, him and his crew. Since he was
the only one mobile at the moment, it was Franklin's responsibility to rescue
the remaining two members of his crew. He was, after all, the Mission
Commander.
Franklin turned back
toward Lieutenant Commander Green when he heard the ping of a bullet
strike the nearest emergency basket. He kept low, crawling on his belly back to
where the wounded pilot lay. Another bullet spanged off a girder.
Below him, through
the metal grid of the walkway, he saw wisps of white vapor from the venting
cryogenic fuels. He scuttled forward, mashing his elbows into the rough grating
to speed his way.
If just one of those
bullets hit the liquid hydrogen tank, all three of them would be crispy
critters in milliseconds.
39
ICEBERG TRIED TO SHOOT again, but the automatic rifle still refused to fire. He
wanted to throw the useless weapon across the swamp. The rifle had dropped from
the high bay to the VAB floor, then fallen in the water as Iceberg had dived
out of the way of the explosion. Given time, he could have taken the rifle
apart, cleaned it, and put it back together; he'd done that enough times in
basic cadet training at the Academy.
Well, given time he
could have called in an air strike to take out the son of a bitch, too. But he
had no such luxury.
Jacques kept firing.
Now that one of the crewmen was down, the sniper slowed his pace, methodically
taking aim to keep from wasting bullets.
Grimly furious,
Iceberg plodded the last distance to the APC. He had difficulty seeing straight
through the blur of pain. He tried to control his breathing. The heartbeat
pounding in his ears grew louder. Twenty yards away. Cool. . . frosty . . .
chill. . .
The sniper had only
to turn around, see him, fire a round into his chest—
Ten yards. Iceberg grasped the useless
rifle by the barrel, like a caveman with a club. He could creep up to the side
and surprise the son of a bitch, whop him on the side of the head—
Five yards. Jacques
clicked off another round toward Atlantis, then reached down to pick up
a new magazine casing. He hesitated, as if he had heard something, then jerked
his head up and looked around.
Iceberg leaped
forward. No time like the present.
Jacques cursed in a
string of deep French gutturals as he spotted Iceberg. He stood and fanned his
weapon, shooting bullets over the damp grass. Still dashing forward, Iceberg
slammed up against the hard, hot body of the APC, where the sniper standing
inside the vehicle's hatch could not aim. Projectiles hit the ground with
muffled thuds, and then nothing.
Iceberg breathed
hard, trying to catch his breath. Cool, cool, he told himself. He heard Jacques
curse as he struggled with what sounded like a jammed magazine case.
No time to think—just
move. Holding the rifle barrel with his right hand, Iceberg boosted himself on
the APC's wide tracks and popped over the top of the armored vehicle, yelling
like a banshee.
Jacques frantically
tried to reload from a kneeling position, but seeing Iceberg appear like a
madman, Jacques struggled out of the hatch. A magazine cartridge of bullets
clanked and pattered on the vehicle's armor plates.
"Freeze!"
Iceberg yelled, bringing up his automatic rifle as if it still worked. He
jabbed the weapon toward the sniper, finger encircling the trigger, bluffing
with 100 percent enthusiasm. His heart thundered with adrenaline.
Jacques flicked a
glance down at his own unloaded weapon.
"Do it if you
want," Iceberg shouted. "This is one of those 'make my day' situations."
Jacques clenched his
huge fists and stepped back, obviously calculating the chances of being able to
overpower Iceberg. The sniper flicked his gaze toward the sodden, muddy cast on
Iceberg's left leg.
"Drop your
weapon. Now!" Iceberg stepped forward gingerly on the uneven metal
surface. "Or we'll see what a few rounds will do to your skull from a
range of two feet." He made his voice cold, vicious. "A teaspoon of
your brains might even make it all the way to the launchpad if I get the
splatter pattern right."
Jacques spoke with a
thick French accent, his tanned face melting into a confident smile. "If
you couldn't shoot me from back there, you will not shoot me now, stupid
man." Taking a slow step backward, the sniper suddenly lurched for the
APC's access hatch as if to reach for another weapon.
Iceberg smashed the
butt of his useless rifle into the small of the thug's back. Jacques yelped in
pain. Iceberg grabbed the collar of the sniper's camouflage shirt, hauling him
back out onto the roof. He swung the rifle as hard as he could and cracked the
sniper on the side of the skull. Jacques staggered and Iceberg swung out again.
Jacques went down
like a single-engine fighter with a flameout.
"More than one
way to use a weapon," Iceberg said.
He prodded the
terrorist with his right toe, to make sure the man was out cold; then he
slumped down himself, feeling his body shake with the sudden release of
tension. "No time for a siesta yet," he told himself, then heaved up
to his feet again. At least he had stopped the shooting.
Moving gingerly,
hoping that his aches and pains would somehow cancel themselves out, he climbed
down inside the APC to scrounge around in the vehicle's emergency equipment.
He smelled blood and
the acrid bitterness of gunpowder, then saw the two blood-soaked bodies of the
original rescue crew, unceremoniously dumped in the rear compartment. Their
glazed dead eyes glinted at Iceberg in the slanted light, as if asking why he had
taken so long to get there.
Iceberg stared for a
helpless second, then snapped himself back into motion. He had to take care of
Jacques before he returned to consciousness. Cold . . . chill. . . frosty . . .
He took the emergency kit and climbed back up, hopping from rung to rung on the
ladder.
Squatting out in the
hot morning sunlight, Iceberg pulled a fireproof line and a utility knife from
the emergency kit. It took a few minutes to tie up the sniper, and then a
potent whiff from a packet of smelling salts from the kit revived him. Jacques
shook his head groggily as he came to. Iceberg needed a hell of a lot more
information before he went charging out to the launchpad, and he didn't have
time to play games. Gator had been shot, Nicole was a hostage at the LCC, and Atlantis
could blow up at any moment. He took out the utility knife, holding it
close to the sniper's cheek. The blond man's eyes rolled to the side, trying to
see what his captor intended. It would be easy to slash the man's face, to
force him into talking. But Iceberg couldn't do that. That's why we're the
Good Guys, he thought grimly. He just hoped the threat would be strong
enough.
Iceberg breathed hard
with exertion. "Okay, asshole—what's going on?" Jacques didn't
answer.
"Listen to
me—you just shot my best friend up there, and I'm not feeling very charitable
right now." He pricked the tanned cheek with the tip of the utility knife,
drawing blood before he pulled back.
"Last time I
tried to interrogate one of your friends—Mory, I think his name was—he ended up
with two bullets in the chest and a long fall to the floor of the VAB. I also
watched big, bald Cueball go up in flames. And before that I took care of your
ponytailed friend at the guard gate. Now I've got you."
Jacques still just
glared at him.
Iceberg set his mouth
and tightened the ropes around Jacques's wrists. The man grunted with new pain
but said nothing. Iceberg twisted his head to glance at the sky. It was still a
cloudless day, and the sun was rising higher.
"Just wait until
it really gets hot up here," Iceberg said, "and you start to cook on
top of this metal frying pan."
Iceberg yanked the
walkie-talkie from the sniper's waist. It was time to poke a stick in the
hornet's nest. He angrily depressed the "talk" button. "Hello,
is anybody out there? I've got your boy Jacques." Static filled the
speaker.
He scowled at the
sniper lying bound on top of the APC and spoke into the walkie-talkie.
"I'm looking for that scumbag Phillips. Hey, you looked like Geraldo on
TV, only with less class." He hoped his taunting would get some sort of
reaction. "I've taken out your blond-haired coward here, just like I got
rid of your goons at the VAB. The Atlantis crew is safe in the emergency
bunker—and now I'm coming to get you. You're
next, Phillips." The part about the astronauts
was not entirely true, but he hoped it would infuriate the little man—and buy
Iceberg some time.
The speaker on the
walkie-talkie clicked. "Who is this, please? I wasn't aware we had a party
line."
"Yeah, it's a
party all right." Iceberg smiled at Jacques, who glared back at him.
"You can just call me Iceberg."
Phillips came back
after only the slightest hesitation. "Ah, this must be the famous Colonel
Adam Friese. You seem most enduring. We had thought you were no longer with
us."
The cultured voice
sounded rattled. Iceberg clicked the radio once more while keeping a steady eye
on Jacques, showing no surprise that Phillips knew his name. Maybe he had
tortured it out of Nicole. "Hey, I'm laughing at your tough guys,
Phillips. What a bunch of amateurs. Cheerio—and hold on tight. I'll be coming
for you before the day is done."
Iceberg released the
"talk" button. Picking up his broken rifle, he forced another
grin—for no other reason than to rattle Jacques.
The sniper sneered at
him. "You can't stop us, stupid man. It is all over your television. There
are enough explosives on the external tank to take out the entire launchpad
complex—and Monsieur Phillips controls the detonator. The access arm was
retracted during the countdown, so you cannot reach the bomb I planted. It is you
who's lost."
Iceberg's face
drained of color. A bomb on the external tank! Trying to control his rage, he
picked up Jacques by the ropes and slammed him against the armor, then let him
drop back. He shook his head in disgust, reining in his temper. "You
aren't worth it."
Iceberg picked up his
rifle. After seeing the sniper shoot at the astronauts on the gantry, after
watching Gator fall, after seeing the bodies of the APC crew murdered in cold
blood and stuffed in the back compartment, Iceberg would have shot the bastard
himself if he'd had a working gun.
Instead, he hit
Jacques on the side of the head with the rifle butt again. He couldn't afford
to have the jerk get loose. Blood dribbled from his temple wound, and the
sniper lay still.
Iceberg took several
deep breaths, then wiped his face with the back of his hand. He glanced toward
the shuttle, knowing his time was running out.
"So many
terrorists, so little time," he said.
40
RAISING HIS EYEBROWS AT the vehemence of Iceberg's outburst, Mr. Phillips stared at
the walkie-talkie. "My such language from a respected astronaut!" He
pursed his lips, hiding his annoyance that the pest was still alive. "Some
people just can't control themselves under pressure. I see why he was taken off
the Atlantis crew "
He glanced over at
Nicole Hunter, who was grinning in a childish expression of utter delight upon
learning that Iceberg still lived. He scowled. "Don't allow yourself to be so pleased, Ms.
Hunter. Just because Colonel Friese has survived so far doesn't mean we can't
rectify the situation."
On the countertop,
the walkie-talkie remained silent. Nicole didn't say a word, but her continued
smug expression made him want to stride over, carrying the step stool with him,
so he could climb up and stare her eye to eye.
Yvette's frost-pale
eyes blazed wide, her tanned face flushed with urgency. "Monsieur
Phillips, that man has done something to my brother." She tucked
the saw-bladed knuckle knife into her waist satchel, preparing to leave.
"I will . . . punish him."
Mr. Phillips saw the
deep furnace of love in Yvette's cold eyes, the rage that shone on her bronzed
face. He couldn't afford to have Colonel Friese making more trouble, and they
only had another hour and a half to meet the deadline. More important, he would
never be able to stop her, no matter what he said, if her lover and brother was
in danger. It was better to focus Yvette's energy than to allow her to simmer.
It intimidated him to
be left with only trigger-happy Rusty to hold the hostages in the LCC. This
wasn't how he had planned it. He thought of poor Duncan assigned to the guard
gate, a colleague who had helped the team on other missions, a man who hated
authority and hated the establishment. But Duncan no longer answered his
radio—perhaps Iceberg had done something to him, as he claimed . . . not to
mention the debacle in the Vehicle Assembly Building and the certain deaths of
Cueball and Mory. Mr. Phillips hoped NASA Security continued to believe in a
veritable terrorist army hidden throughout the KSC site.
On the bright side,
with every death of a team member, the respective shares of the shuttle ransom
grew larger and larger to the survivors.
Also, seeing Nicole
Hunter's dark eyes dart away with a flicker of uncertainty, afraid of what the
big blond woman might do to Iceberg, made it all worthwhile.
He shooed Yvette away
with a wave. "Go save your dear Jacques," he said as he watched
Nicole, "and make certain the outcome is unpleasant for Iceberg." He
held up a finger. "Send Rusty up here as you leave."
Even with only the trigger-happy redhead,
Mr. Phillips knew he had the upper hand so long as he held the detonator
button. "Don't worry about the rest of those pesky astronauts above on the
gantry—no one can reach them now that Jacques took out the elevator."
"Oui, Monsieur
Phillips. I'll see to Jacques . . . and Iceberg." With her rangy legs, she
sprinted out, anxious to save her lover. Yvette always made an extremely
effective deterrent.
Mr. Phillips walked
to the counter and picked up a phone. He held it up to Nicole. "Ms.
Hunter, I need you to contact your security forces. Yvette must have clear
passage—any problems she encounters will mean an instant response on my
part." He held up the detonator button. "Is that clear?"
Nicole nodded
stiffly, looked at Andrei Trovkin's body on the floor, and made the call,
feeling numb, in shock.
The freckle-faced
redhead ran up the half flight of stairs two steps at a time to join Mr.
Phillips in the VIP observation deck. He grinned, breathless with his own
excitement. He held both handguns out, like a cowboy, and his assault rifle was
strapped to his chest.
"A heavier
responsibility has fallen on just the two of us, Rusty," Mr. Phillips said
with a thin smile. "You and I must baby-sit our friends."
Rusty beamed.
"Definitely, Mr. Phillips."
Senator Boorman
slumped in his chair like a limp doll and continued staring at the silent
phone, as if mentally willing it to ring. He tossed jittery glances at the two
corpses in the corner under the narrow shattered windows, at the glass from the
VAB explosion still on the floor. Mr. Phillips raised his voice. "Senator,
have you given up?" Boorman frantically held up both hands. "I've
made all the calls," he said. "I'm waiting. The NSC is discussing it
right now. This decision has to go the highest levels."
Mr. Phillips gave him
a cold smile, then snapped open his pocket watch. "Our time is running
out. While I do enjoy your company, Senator, you wouldn't believe how many
items remain on my list of Things to Do Today."
Nicole Hunter
snorted. "Or we could just wait a few minutes while Iceberg takes out the
rest of your goons."
Mr. Phillips rounded
on her, trying hard to keep his temper in check. But before he could say anything,
the senator blurted, "Hasn't your boyfriend already caused enough damage,
Hunter? If it wasn't for him, we could have been out of this a long time
ago."
Nicole's face turned
pale, then flushed in embarrassment. She back-pedaled, leaning into her chair.
"He's not my boyfriend."
Mr. Phillips drew a
sharp breath. He reached inside his jacket for the PDA, nipped open the small
screen, and used the stylus to scroll down
through the files. There it was, clearly marked.
"How could I have missed this before?"
During her time as an
astronaut trainee, Nicole Hunter—call sign Panther—had engaged in a
lengthy, steamy relationship with her fellow astronaut Adam "Iceberg"
Friese.
But since Colonel
Friese had been taken off the flight manifest, Mr. Phillips had not marked his
information files as priority. The cross-reference had not been
apparent, and now the discovery filled him with a warm glow.
"Exhilarating!" he said with a knowing smile.
Nicole avoided his
gaze. Now Mr. Phillips had a much stronger bargaining chip the next time the
renegade astronaut called. And knowing Iceberg's legendary ego, Mr. Phillips
was certain he'd call.
41
ATLANTIS GANTRY
THE SHOOTING FINALLY STOPPED. When Dr. Marc Franklin reached his injured
pilot's side, he was stunned to find the young astronaut still breathing.
Franklin heard a thick gurgling in the man's chest. He had been hit twice, once
in the shoulder, once low in the chest. But at least Gator was alive.
Fallen backward on the walkway, Alexandra Koslovsky struggled to release her foot from the metal grating. "I feel stupid."
"Feel stupid
later," Franklin said curtly. "Let me think of something here, unless
you've got any suggestions."
He considered loading
Gator into the escape basket and sending the pilot down the long wire to safety
while he, Franklin, worked to get Alexandra loose. But with the other four
crewmembers already holed up in the emergency bunker, there would be no one to
help the injured man once the emergency net stopped him. Someone had to ride
along to take care of him.
That meant the only
thing to do was to free Alexandra. Step one. Just like an impromptu checklist.
Franklin crawled up,
expecting the sniper fire to begin again at any moment, and started tugging at
her leg to help her out. He couldn't fathom how she had ever managed to slip
her foot beneath the railing—she must have had her toes pointed straight down
like a ballerina. So much for the graceful space walker.
Alexandra gasped as he
tugged. She tried to speak, but her ankle seemed to hurt too much. Franklin
slowly twisted it around to find any way of freeing her without pushing her leg
deeper, but it seemed hopeless.
"You . . . must
save yourself," she finally said. "Take Lieutenant Commander Gator
with you."
"No."
"At least you
will save someone," she said. "Two out of three."
"I said no. I'm
the commander of this mission and that's the end of it." Franklin
struggled harder. Damn her slim legs, and damn these low metal railings.
Part of Franklin's
mind screamed for him to save himself, just as Alexandra had urged, to carry
Gator into the basket and ride down to safety. But he couldn't stand the
thought of leaving her behind—a part of his crew, which he was supposed to
lead. Provide a good example. And throw in the fact that Alexandra Koslovsky
was a cosmonaut, and a woman—if Franklin abandoned her up here, NASA would
never live it down. He wouldn't be able to live with himself.
This should have been
a routine mission, another triumph for the space program. He was qualified,
respected; he had trained for all of his duties. But not this! Angry at how the
circumstances had conspired against him, Franklin jerked harder on her pinned
leg. Alexandra cried out in pain.
By the book, he
thought. Follow the checklists. Franklin had been trained to minimize
his losses, maximize the return. That had been drilled into him in every astronaut
training class, though it certainly wasn't the way the much-vaunted Commander
Iceberg would have done it.
But then, he didn't
worship Iceberg the way the rest of the crew seemed to. Granted, the former
commander had tipped them off to the hostage situation, but it had forced the
whole crew to react without orders, getting them into this whole mess. He had
no idea what delicate negotiations their brash action had screwed up back at
the LCC. Now, judging from the other disasters he had seen around the site,
smoke trails from other explosions, the sniper shooting at them on the gantry,
he supposed Iceberg was still running around, mucking up the situation.
In fact, if Iceberg
had followed the rules weeks ago—resting and taking care of himself—instead of
showing off with his back flip and breaking his foot, Marc Franklin would be
safe right now, watching the launch from elsewhere. He would have taken
his responsibilities more seriously.
But then, I'm not
Iceberg, he thought sourly as he pulled on Alexandra's ankle once again. Thank
God.
42
INSIDE THE VIDEO RELAY bunker, Amos Friese swallowed the sharp, sour lump in his
throat. He felt like a rabbit hiding in a hole, and the forest was filled with
prowling wolves.
He straightened the body of Cecelia Hawkins, running his fingertips along the smooth fabric of her floral-print blouse, touching her cold arms as he folded them peacefully in place. He had already closed her half-open dark eyes. That had been the hardest part.
His knees creaked as
he struggled to stand. He sucked in a deep
breath, searching for courage as he went to ransack
the mildew-smelling blockhouse for supplies, for some way to cover Cecelia . .
. because that seemed like the appropriate thing to do. He couldn't think
beyond that at the moment.
Fighting leftover dizziness, Amos scrounged
in storage lockers and found coaxial cables, extra fuses of varying amperages,
a tool kit, a fire extinguisher, and an old jar of instant coffee crystals that
had fossilized into a strange sedimentary lump. But he came up with nothing
that would serve as a covering sheet.
Finally, Amos removed
his glasses, then tugged the thick sweater over his head. His hair stuck up in
odd tufts, and he straightened it down with the palm of his hand. He took the
sweater to Cecelia's body, draping it over her head and chest.
"Sorry,
Cecelia," he whispered to her. "It's the best I can do." Around
the corner, the bunker's blast door still hung open from where the booby-trap
explosion had rocked it off its hinges. Shards of sunlight lit the outer
corridor. He avoided the bodies of the two fallen NASA security men outside,
stopping only long enough to make sure both were dead. He couldn't think of
anything to do for them.
He couldn't think of
anything to do at all. Iceberg would have had the answer, would have swung into
action, would have gone looking for solutions or, finding none, he would have
created them out of thin air.
Amos wondered if more
security would come to rescue him, or if the bad guys would return first. The
best thing for him to do would be to go back and watch his video monitors—no,
not just watch them, study them. Once he understood the entire
situation, maybe then he could figure out a way to help NASA.
He felt faint as he
slumped into the old government-issue chair. His body rebelled from the
aftereffects of the tranquilizer dart, as well as grief over Cecelia's death.
His stomach roiled, and he popped one of his fruit-flavored jawbreakers in his
mouth, hoping that would settle him down. It didn't, but at least it eased his
terror-dry throat.
Just watching the
scenes displayed by the surrounding cameras, Amos could see that the entire
Kennedy Space Center was in "deep kimchee," as his brother would have
said. He had no idea how many terrorists were out there, but anyone could see
that the bad guys had the upper hand— at the moment. And, judging by the gantry
images on the monitors, Iceberg was out in the thick of things . . . no big
surprise there. Iceberg didn't know how to stay put, even with a broken foot.
With the one
remaining camera in the Launch Control Center he saw two murdered bodies
against the wall in the VIP observation deck. Nicole Hunter seemed to be
handling the situation bravely, though she looked flustered, completely out of
options. Amos knew exactly how she felt.
He watched the tigerlike blond—Yvette?—set off under orders to go
get Iceberg. Here, sitting on the sidelines, Amos desperately tried to figure a
way that he could give her some alternatives, or at least help his brother.
Amos had watched the
four astronauts from Atlantis take the escape wire down and reach the
safety of the blast bunker, but Gator Green, Dr. Franklin, and the Russian
cosmonaut Koslovsky all remained on the gantry, under sniper fire. Gator was
down with a gunshot wound.
With the gantry
surveillance cameras, the terrorists in the LCC could also see everything that
happened up there. Mr. Phillips, the little guy in charge, had a big advantage
because nobody could surprise him. Iceberg could never sneak up there, nor
could the astronauts slip away.
Mr. Phillips was able to keep an eye on everything.
But all those images
came through Amos's TV relay bunker. Maybe he could do something about that. He
allowed himself a small grin as he finally plotted a course of action.
Due to multiply
redundant NASA safety procedures, numerous shutdown points existed around the
control net inside the restricted launch area. Because so many things could go
wrong at any point in the countdown, any authorized person in the loop who
witnessed a potentially dangerous problem had the power to call for a stop, to
cancel the ignition order and halt the launch.
Amos's relay bunker
was one of those shutdown points. The huge responsibility had been
awe-inspiring when he first realized it, but it had quickly become just part of
the job.
And now Amos had to
use it. Iceberg and Nicole and the Atlantis crew were counting on
him—even though they didn't know it. But he needed to make sure that someone
didn't reroute the video feed. He needed to ensure the cut was permanent.
He froze, intimidated
by what he was about to do—but Iceberg was out there, with the blond assassin
coming after him. And Nicole was being held hostage in the LCC. Gator had been
shot, maybe killed. The space shuttle itself was threatened.
Some situations
called for drastic action.
It would be up to him,
Amos Friese, to take this next step.
Rummaging through the
bank of fiber-optic cable, Amos yanked out the video connections to launchpad
39A. The surveillance cameras on the gantry went dead. The video transmissions
winked out, leaving only static on half the monitor screens. Now the terrorists
were blinded.
"Okay,
Iceberg," Amos mumbled. "The rest is up to you."
43
STILL REVELING IN THE knowledge that Iceberg had survived— so far—Nicole glanced
at the bank of TV monitors showing Atlantis vulnerable and trapped on
its launchpad. The video screens blinked, then all went blank at the same time.
"What the
hell?" Rusty yelled. "Hey, Mr. Phillips!" He whipped out both of
his handguns and pointed them at the hostages, as if he wanted to shoot
someone, anyone, just to blow off a little steam.
Amos, thought
Nicole with sudden realization. Had Iceberg's little brother shut down the video
feeds from the relay bunker? She drew in a breath but kept the information to
herself.
Mr. Phillips's face
blanched. He tapped on one of the dead gray monitors with a smooth fingernail,
as if that might somehow help. He opened his pocket watch and studied the time.
He kept his voice low, cold, threatening. "Explain what has just happened,
Ms. Hunter." He snapped his watch closed. "Without delay." He
tugged on his tie as he strode toward her. He did not look happy.
Nicole studied the
little man. Things were crumbling around him as his deadline approached. Was he
losing control? She decided to take a gamble, albeit a small one. "It
looks to me like the power went out."
"And why is that?" he asked.
Nicole shrugged.
"Maybe Yvette tripped over an extension cord. She was in such a
hurry."
"I do not find
your attitude amusing, Ms. Hunter." Distractedly, he brushed the front of
his jacket, where dried bloodstains still marked a splatter from Trovkin's
death. Mr. Phillips straightened his white-and-gold shuttle pin, then took a
deep breath to calm himself. "My guess is that it has something to do with
your not-so-charming beau, Colonel Iceberg."
He took out the
walkie-talkie he had used to contact Jacques at the APC and set it on the
counter in front of Nicole. "It's time to call him to the principal's
office. If you would do the honors, please, Ms. Hunter? Let us speak with this
Iceberg."
She shook her head,
tossing her short brown-gold hair from side to side. "He won't listen to
you. Iceberg's a very stubborn man."
Mr. Phillips snapped
his fingers at the redhead beside him. "Rusty, hand me one of your guns,
please." Mr. Phillips held out his hand while staring down Nicole. Rusty
slapped one of the pistols into his palm like a medical assistant handing a
scalpel to a surgeon.
"I like to think
of myself as a patient man, Ms. Hunter, but there are limits—and you have
reached them." Mr. Phillips brought the pistol to bear against Nicole's
forehead, pushing it forward. He moved the last inch slowly, tantalizingly,
until the cold barrel pressed directly between her eyes. "Do you want me
to pile three bodies in the corner, or is two enough?" He leaned
over and whispered in her ear. "You see, I've come much too far to put up
with any further setbacks. We're butting up against my deadline. Less than an
hour to go. This is where—how do you astronauts put it?—the rubber meets the
road."
Nicole felt the hard,
deadly circle burning the front of her skull. She froze, too tense even to breathe. It seemed
as if her heart had stopped beating. "You wouldn't kill me yourself,"
she said, trying to keep her voice from shaking. "You'd have someone else
dirty their hands."
"I'll do
it!" Rusty piped up.
Mr. Phillips
hesitated. He pulled back and smoothed his lapels, all the time looking at her
curiously. "You're quite right, Ms. Hunter." He turned and held the
pistol by its trigger guard, handing it back to the redhead. "Rusty, take
this and shoot Ms. Hunter."
Grinning wildly,
Rusty snatched the pistol away from Mr. Phillips and turned it toward Nicole.
"No, wait. . .
wait!" Her breath quickened.
Mr. Phillips held up
a hand to stop Rusty. The redhead frowned in disappointment.
With a trembling hand
Nicole reached out to pick up the walkie-talkie. Leering like a playground
bully, Rusty pressed the pistol against her head hard enough that it would
leave a mark. She tried to ignore the threat, putting the walkie-talkie against
her ear and mouth. She clicked the "talk" button.
"Iceberg!
Iceberg, come in. This is . . . this is Panther. Over." She released the
button, listening to a hiss of static. It had been a long time since she had
used that call sign. It brought back too many memories that she couldn't afford
to dredge up. . .
She repeated her
message and waited. She hoped he wouldn't play games, not now. Rusty pressed
the pistol even harder. "Iceberg, this is Panther" she said.
"Answer, dammit. It's important."
She was about to try
again when his voice crackled back. "Panther, are you okay?"
She bit her lip to
keep it from trembling, then pushed the "transmit" button. "Just
having a ball. You know how hectic launch day is." She drew a deep breath
and extended the walkie-talkie toward him, still holding the "talk"
button down. "Mr. Phillips, meet my friend Iceberg."
Mr. Phillips held his
hands behind his back and leaned forward to speak into the walkie-talkie.
"A pleasure, Colonel Iceberg. However, I must tell you we don't appreciate
your meddling. If you continue to be a nuisance, you will have to face the
consequences. Consequences poor Ms. Hunter will experience."
Nicole swallowed
hard. "Did you get that, Iceberg? Over."
The long, silent
pause on the walkie-talkie told her just how angry he must be. She knew Iceberg
didn't like to feel helpless, didn't like to be reminded that he wasn't in control. He
expected to be the center of attention, the problem solver, the great
commander—and now he was all alone. And she was here in the LCC, as ineffective
as he was.
Finally, Iceberg
answered slowly. "Panther, do you want me to come over and put this guy's
chin through his forehead?"
Rusty began to
giggle. "Just let him try it!"
Mr. Phillips frowned.
"I am not amused by displays of bravado, Rusty—not from this crippled
astronaut who thinks he's too important . . . or from you, either."
The redhead looked
cowed. "Sorry, Mr. Phillips. You're the boss."
With prompting from
Mr. Phillips, Nicole squeezed the "transmit" button again. She spoke
as she looked over at the body of Andrei Trovkin. "Iceberg, you can't
handle it yourself. You've got a broken foot, and they outnumber you and outgun
you. This is not a training exercise. And . . . and I don't want you
killed."
Her dread grew with
her certainty that he planned to do something stupid. "Iceberg, don't be
bullheaded. These people are ready to blow up Atlantis if they don't get
their way."
He finally answered
back, his own frustration and anger directed at her. "Sure, Panther—I'll
leave it to you and Boorman. You just keep sitting around discussing the
situation. Why don't you all have a meeting? That'll solve everything.
Talk, talk, talk it over." The words were laced with scorn.
"Meanwhile, though, I've got to do whatever I can to help my crew. They're
my responsibility—no matter what some penny-ante gangster has in mind."
The transmission cut
off momentarily; then Iceberg clicked back. "Oh, I forgot to follow
protocol and say 'Over and Out.' " Then Nicole heard only static, stung by
his words.
Mr. Phillips walked
up to Rusty and with a finger lifted the pistol from Nicole's forehead. He
heaved a long-suffering sigh. "I should have read my horoscope this
morning. 'Scorpio: Taking large spacecraft hostage may be more inconvenience
than it's worth.' " He shook his head.
Senator Boorman, who
had kept himself apart from this entire exchange, hung up his own telephone and
bolted out of the chair with a smug look on his face. "I got it!" he
said, clenching his fist triumphantly, as if this was the best thing he could
have imagined in his entire life.
"They'll pay
your ransom, Mr. Phillips. The helicopter is on its way, complete with your
briefcase full of gemstones—it'll be here within the hour."
44
YANKING ONE MORE TIME on the rope that bound the unconscious form of Jacques, Iceberg
jammed the walkie-talkie onto his own belt clip and tried to ignore his
swirling thoughts of Nicole.
Trying to talk
reasonably with her drove him crazy as
always. The “new” Nicole wanted to negotiate, map out the implications, reach
compromises—rather than just making up her mind to do something.
But a lot of
touchy-feely discussions would not solve the terrorist problem, nor would it
rescue his crew.
It was typical of
management types—the same people who had brought him artsy-fartsy solutions
like Zero Defects, Management By Objective, and TQM would rather sit around the
campfire and sing Kumbaya than attack the problem head on. He had to
charge in. Action not words. Easier to apologize afterward than to ask
permission in the first place.
Iceberg took a brief
inventory. Jacques's rifle had jammed and remained unloaded, while Mory's
battered weapon wouldn't shoot. So much for Iceberg's terrorist-smashing
arsenal. He didn't have the time to break down and repair either rifle—but at
least he had stopped the sniper fire, and now he could go see about his friend
Gator . . . see if he was still alive.
Next stop, launchpad
39A.
If he was in shape,
with his foot in perfect condition, Iceberg could make the run in a few
minutes. Now, though, if he tried to walk that far, even hopping on one leg, it
would take him half an hour.
And that was precious
time he didn't have. Iceberg glanced at his watch. According to the broadcast
ultimatum, the ransom money was due in fifty minutes. Time to book.
He tumbled the limp
form of the blond terrorist into the APC hatch like an old mail sack.
"Sorry about this," Iceberg said, "but you'll get over it."
Jacques dropped with a painful-sounding thud. Iceberg hoped the blow would
knock him out for a little longer.
Moving gingerly,
breathing through clenched teeth because of the pain in his bones and muscles,
Iceberg eased himself through the APC's hatch. The inside of the vehicle
remained hot and dark; it smelled oily, with overtones of gunpowder and blood
from the slaughtered rescue crew. At the moment, though, he couldn't be choosy.
Shouldering Jacques's bound form aside, he made his way to the control panel.
It felt great to sit down, but now his aches turned to agony as his body had a
chance to realize just how much damage it had suffered.
Iceberg looked around
and tried to recall the routine. All astronauts were required to go through APC
training, so he set to work powering up the armored rescue vehicle. He reached
up to the right and flipped two switches before setting the vehicle in gear.
The diesel engine
coughed once, then twice more before dying. Iceberg slammed his hand against
the control panel. "Okay, big guy— what gives?" He tried again, but
the engine refused to turn over.
Looking around the
cramped area, he found the checklist. "When all else fails . . ." He
scanned the instructions until he spotted two steps he'd neglected. The next
time he tried to bring the engine up, it started like a charm.
The APC vibrated, and
the control area filled with a high-pitched whirring as various diagnostic
systems came to life. The exterior video screen flicked on to show an
unobstructed view of the shuttle. The entire launch area looked weirdly
deserted—as it should have been during the final countdown.
He reached down and
shoved the vehicle into gear. The APC lurched forward at a crawl, then shifted
into a higher gear. Soon Iceberg bumped across the desolate area at twenty-five
miles an hour—which seemed a mind boggling speed after all he'd been through.
"Now this is
more like it," Iceberg said. He glanced over at Jacques, out cold. He
hoped the sniper was having nightmares.
He drove up to the
white concrete pad surrounding the gantry, past a chain-link inner security
fence bearing a red-white-and-blue banner that proclaimed GO ATLANTIS! in huge
letters.
Iceberg drove around
to the elevator side of the launch superstructure and throttled down the APC
engine. His watch showed that four minutes had passed—so far so good. He looked
at Mory's automatic rifle in the seat beside him, then decided to take it
anyway. A good club was better than a bloody fist.
Hauling himself out
of the APC, he blinked in the harsh sunlight. Jacques still lay like discarded
garbage in the dimness of the vehicle, tied up and unconscious, incapable of
causing further harm. Iceberg lowered himself over the side of the vehicle and
started limping toward the gantry elevator.
The launch complex
remained quiet. Too quiet. Usually, the air was filled with the sound of access
arms swinging out, cranes moving, guard patrols and technicians milling about.
Now, he heard only the creaking and groaning of the shuttle's cryogenic tanks
and a distant hum of two backup generators.
Four of the Atlantis
crewmembers had holed up in the emergency bunker at the end of the escape
lines, far from the flame bucket and launchpad. But Gator Green and two other
crewmembers remained high up at the shuttle crew level, almost two hundred feet
aboveground.
And he knew Gator had
been shot.
Iceberg hobbled to
the gantry elevator, using the broken rifle as a crude walking stick. His damp cast had
started going soft at the edges, losing its support. He stabbed the elevator
button.
Glancing up, he
thought the gantry and shuttle looked like an immense skyscraper overhead.
Somewhere even higher was the explosive package Jacques had boasted about
planting.
Iceberg punched the
button again for the elevator, but nothing happened. No sound of hydraulics, no
motors running, no motion whatsoever. No lights winked on—not even security
lights. Stepping back, he scanned the launchpad complex. He heard nothing but
the sound of distant generators.
And then it hit him. Backup
generators. They must have kicked in to keep venting the volatile liquid
fuel and oxidizers, providing a minimum of emergency electrical power to keep
things from blowing up all by themselves.
But the rest of the
launchpad power had been cut.
He stopped, stunned.
If those secondary generators had kicked on, that meant there was an electrical
short somewhere, a short that could cause a spark to ignite the hydrogen vapor
bleeding off from the fuel tank. Had the sniper taken out the elevator power
box? And was Mr. Phillips watching him even now?
Iceberg jerked his
head up to see the surveillance camera. The light on the camera was off.
Iceberg stepped to the side. The camera didn't follow his motion.
What was going on?
Even without the elevator power box, the emergency generator system should
be running the video cameras.
Unless someone had
physically shut them off. That's the only way it could happen.
Iceberg grinned. It
had to be Amos. Phillips would be blinded, unable to see Iceberg or any other
rescue efforts on the gantry. Now with the sniper removed from the picture and
the cameras switched off, Iceberg was free to act. Way to go, little bro!
But, of course,
without power the elevators would never work either. And Iceberg had no choice
but to climb to level 195 using the winding metal stairs. With a broken foot in
a cast that had started to fall apart.
He shuddered, then
shook his head to clear his vision. He slung the broken rifle over his
shoulders and limped up to the long flight of stairs. Two hundred feet up.
"This is going
to be one hell of a long climb," Iceberg said.
Running his
hands up the warm metal rails alongside the narrow steps, he pulled himself up,
then hopped on his good foot. His biceps bulged with the strain. He’d have to
proceed with agonizing slowness, step by step. Cool. . . chill . . . frosty.
. .
But instead of
thinking about the ordeal, Iceberg just did it.
45
WHEN MR. PHILLIPS HEARD that the ransom suitcase was on its way, his elation helped
him to rebound from the bad news about the blacked-out cameras on the gantry.
Up and down, like a bouncing bull market. Exhilarating!
"All good things come to those who wait," Mr. Phillips said with a grin. He could barely suppress his excitement. He strutted to the windows that overlooked the firing floor, feeling in total control. Technicians and engineers sat glumly at their workstations below him; some scowled, others looked up in resignation. Remarkable.
The firing floor
looked uncannily like the stock exchange's trading floor after the market took
a dive, stunned workers filled with cowed desperation. It was as if interest
rates had hiccuped, and first the bonds then the stocks had plummeted . . .
traders selling short, never quite believing that the science-and-technology
sector would rebound. Once again Mr. Phillips felt the satisfying warmth of
defeating a technological genie, and this time it was the shuttle program.
The emotional high
rivaled that from his early teens when he had finally, cleverly switched off
his mother's life-support system, after years of wishing for her to die. He had
led a lonely life as a child, waiting and waiting for the promise of
wealth she would bequeath him upon her death, but technological advances had kept
her frail and useless body alive, for years denying him an inheritance and
freedom. He had overcome the system then that had kept her from dying—and today
he had overcome the system again.
Mr. Phillips turned
as Senator Boorman cleared his throat. The senator looked around the VIP room
as if seeking approval of his toil and selfless effort in arranging for
delivery of the gems, but no one applauded. Judging from his track record, the
senator probably expected a substantial campaign contribution—say, a percentage
of the ransom.
Mr. Phillips pointed
a narrow finger at Boorman. "You'd best make sure the briefcase isn't
rigged, no explosive dye packets or other Hollywood gimmicks. I would be quite
angry to discover any FBI pranks."
His heart pounded
with the thrill, yet he maintained his calm demeanor. Just a short while
longer, and all would be triumphant fanfares and infamy in the news media . . .
and once again, financial security, but this time for a very long time.
He could deal with
that.
Mr. Phillips turned
to Rusty. "We must prepare for our departure. However, there's an
uncomfortable loose end that I'd like to see to."
He straightened his
tie and walked to where Nicole had primly seated herself, folding her hands on
her navy slacks. The Launch Director waited, a coiled mass of resistance and
reluctant cooperation. "Ms. Hunter, I believe this falls under your area
of expertise. I must be able to observe the shuttle and the gantry, to make
sure my bargaining chip has not been tampered with in these last, most crucial
moments of our transaction.
There's no telling what your boyfriend might be doing out there."
"He's not my
boyfriend," Nicole said.
"That's not my
problem," Mr. Phillips answered. He held up the detonator box, rubbing his
thumb in a light caress over the firing button. "I want you to get the
video back on at the launchpad—immediately, if not sooner." He snickered.
"My mother used that phrase a lot. I've always hated it myself."
Moving stiffly,
Nicole turned to the controls in front of her. She played with the computer
terminal for a few moments, looked at the meaningless words on her screen as if
she didn't think Mr. Phillips knew what was going on. He hated it when people
underestimated his intelligence.
She looked up
soberly, fingering her gold necklace charm as if it were some sort of talisman.
"I can't do that. The line's been severed. It's physically impossible to
bring the cams back on-line unless the cable is repaired. And I can't find the
break from here."
Mr. Phillips shook
his head, heaving a long disappointed sigh. "I don't think so, Ms. Hunter.
Apparently I know your own safety lockout systems better than you do . . . or
could it be that you're lying to me?"
Nicole pressed her
lips into a pale hard line but made no comment.
"I know there
are shutdown points at many places in the loop, and I also know that the video
can be rerouted from the source. As Launch Director
you are capable of determining where this emergency cutoff was thrown. I would like you to do that for me—right now,
please."
Nicole hesitated. Her
hands twitched on the keyboard as if she were on the verge of crossing her arms
in defiance again. Mr. Phillips rolled his eyes toward the acoustic panels on
the ceiling. "So late in the game, everyone in this room is expendable. I
would advise that you not force me to prove my resolve yet another time. We've
still got a few hostages left."
That did the trick,
and Nicole moved rapidly to check her status board. She used every system as if
she had been trained on it. A very well-rounded astronaut, this Ms. Hunter.
"We can see the
shutdown didn't occur here in the LCC," Nicole said. She swallowed, as if
reluctant to give the answer, glancing through the slanted windows toward the
crowded technicians still trapped on the firing floor.
Mr. Phillips waited
patiently, tapping his fingers together. "Yes? Do tell." He glanced
toward Rusty. The redhead saw the glance and gave a high laugh.
"It's . . . in the TV relay bunker," she said
quietly, sounding defeated. "The control point for the security monitoring
cameras."
"Impossible. The
bunker's been neutralized."
Nicole merely
shrugged.
Mr. Phillips turned
to scowl at Rusty, whose face flushed with surprise, masking his forest of
freckles with a ruddy tinge. "That was your department, Rusty. Could this
be evidence of sloppy work?"
The redhead frowned
deeply, angrily. "The fat bitch was dead! I checked her. And we booby-trapped
the door to kill anybody coming in . . ." He drew a sudden quick breath.
"The geek with glasses! Maybe he didn't get a full dose. Yvette said the
blow dart would kill him but—"
"But somehow
it didn't turn out as planned," Mr. Phillips finished, letting his
disappointment show through again. He felt suddenly hot, as if the temperature
had soared. This would ruin everything.
"Why can't
Yvette just use a gun like everybody else?" Rusty grumbled. "Damn
showboat."
Mr. Phillips worked
at his collar as the heat seemed to grow. Everyone in the room watched him. Damn,
he had used Yvette to neutralize the bunker, and she had never failed him
before. But the signs were all there—this was the most critical part. Without
the video he had no way to check on the bomb on the shuttle. Everything
depended on this—the ransom, the escape. Everything.
He strutted across
the room. He didn't like it, but he was forced to play his last card.
"Rusty, now you're going to have to go take care of it yourself. I don't
like being left alone with our guests here. No telling what misbehavior they
might consider, but there's nothing for it. You must go tend to the mess."
He snapped his
finger. "Hand me the Beretta. You take another assault rifle out of the
car for yourself, but leave the rest of the toys for me. Dump them in the
lobby. I have to prepare for the arrival of our helicopter. Now go on, and
don't dawdle along the way. We need you back here as soon as possible."
Rusty looked
determined and eager. The redhead's passion more than made up for his lack of
foresight. "I'll get him, Mr. Phillips. You can count on me.
Definitely!"
Mr. Phillips nodded
absently. "You do that." He wasn't sure if he had sent Rusty out on this
mission in the hopes that the young man might become a casualty. He felt he had
more than made up for any outstanding obligations he owed Rusty, even if the
redhead had helped to establish a new life for Mr. Phillips, back when it had
mattered. But as much as he disliked being left alone, being able to see the
shuttle was too important for the rest of the plan.
Mr. Phillips cradled
the Beretta in his hand and held the detonator in the other. He didn't like to
use weapons, which were so loud and heavy and uncertain. He preferred employing
other people for that, but he had to be flexible. No plan could be too rigid to
account for circumstances.
After Rusty dashed
down the LCC steps and out of the building, Mr. Phillips leaned back in a
creaking chair and surveyed the hostages in front of him. "I know you must
be considering how to overpower me, and I naturally get rather edgy in
situations like this. It's the burden of responsibility, you know—but because
the stakes are so high, I will be less understanding if anything, anything
at all, makes me nervous."
He swept the pistol
across the hostages, most of whom flinched in fear. Only Nicole sat back,
meeting his gaze. "Besides"—he waved the detonator—"I can always
blow the shuttle as a last resort. It'll only take me a second."
He wished he had
thought to get a cup of coffee, but by now the pot would be sour and bitter,
several hours old. And he had noted that the LCC provided only powdered
artificial creamer, which he despised. If they had kept real cream, Mr.
Phillips might have made someone get him a cup.
"Let's just sit
back and relax for this last half hour, everybody." Mr. Phillips crossed
one leg over the other. "I've got an idea. Does anyone know the Yale fight
song?"
46
SITTING ON THE EDGE of his creaking chair in the video blockhouse, Amos Friese watched
his array of TV monitors, barely restraining a self-satisfied chuckle. By
cutting 'the video feed from the launchpad, he had caused one heck of a lot
confusion inside the Launch Control Center! Mr. Phillips certainly found it
distressing.
"I hope you find
that exhilarating, suckers," Amos said. He had thrown a wrench in
the terrorists' plans, and now he felt elated—glad to have done something. It
was only a small flicker of vengeance for what they had done to Cecelia—but it was better
than nothing. Iceberg would have slapped Amos on the back hard enough to knock
the wind out of him.
But, unfortunately,
the plan backfired on him.
Watching on the LCC
monitor, Amos saw Mr. Phillips dispatch the freckle-faced thug to the video
relay bunker. The redhead nodded eagerly after receiving his instructions, and
ran out of view . . . coming here, coming to get him. Him!
"Uh-oh,"
Amos said. As he watched from inside the once safe blockhouse, he felt a hard
lump of ice form in the pit of his stomach, spreading fingers of frost through
his bloodstream. His nostrils flared as he breathed heavily. "Man oh man,
am I in trouble."
Rusty would never settle
for a simple tranquilizer dart, as the blond woman had. Because Amos had
screwed up their plans, the redhead would want blood—his blood, and lots
of it.
Amos jumped out of
his chair and looked around, seeking help—but he found nothing to assist him.
He was inside the restricted launch area, and it was him alone to fight against
an overzealous thug with a machine gun.
He had to hide.
Amos looked for nooks
or crannies into which he could squeeze his body—then he saw sunlight spilling
in through the ruined blockhouse entry and rubble from the booby-trap
explosive.
Maybe he could run
outside, far from the bunker.
Amos could just run
out of the building, take his old Firebird, or maybe even the NASA security
vehicle, and drive off—but then he would be painfully obvious and vulnerable on
the empty and restricted roads. Rusty was probably already in his own car and
would have no trouble chasing after him.
Or he could head out
on foot and duck into the dense underbrush. The thickets of palmettos,
creepers, and scrub oak would hide him from prying eyes—and he would be left
alone to make his peace with the coral snakes and the wild boars and the
alligators. This was Merritt Island National Wildlife Sanctuary, after all.
But then he thought
of Iceberg, out there doing what he could to save the day. No, Amos would stay
here. Not because of his fear of the wild animals, but because running away
meant flat-out surrendering to the bad guys . . . and he just couldn't do that.
These people had already killed Cecelia.
They had tried to kill him, threatened to blow up Atlantis and its crew,
and taken Nicole Hunter hostage. Iceberg was already out fighting his own
battles against the thugs, so Amos certainly couldn't just cower in the bushes
and wait for help.
He wondered what his
brother would have done in this situation. Iceberg would stay and slug it out,
of course. He would come out swinging his bare fists if he could find no other
weapon—and he would probably take out three or four of the slimeballs before
they finally gunned him down.
Amos knew he couldn't
succeed doing that. He wasn't a brawny hero-type. Admit it, he thought. I'm
a nerd with delusions of grandeur, and would cause no harm whatsoever. Do
not pass Go! Do not collect $200.
He had to use his
head. He had time, not much . . . but enough, if he could come up with a kind
of plan. And he had an advantage in that he knew Rusty was coming.
His throat went dry,
and he considered sucking on another one of the jawbreakers from the big jar on
his desk. Instead Amos took out his second can of Jolt Cola, popped it open,
and shot it down. It seemed like only seconds before the supercharged drink hit
him like a bag of pure sugar.
Wow! That was great. He popped open a third can, gulped it, and
felt the energy surge through his veins. Man oh man did he need that!
As he sipped the last
of the cola, Amos thought of his childhood. He and his older brother,
Adam—before Adam had adopted his call sign Iceberg—had played in the
snow-covered mountains around Colorado Springs. The two boys were Air Force
brats, their father assigned to the USAF Academy for a few years, before they
were hauled off to Dayton, Ohio . . . then Albuquerque, New Mexico . . . then
San Antonio, Texas.
Amos remembered
playing hide-and-seek in the quiet, cold pine forests of Colorado, wrapped in
his insulated winter jacket to keep him from catching a cold. His mother never
failed to make sure Amos dressed warmly because his health was always bad.
The two boys would
play war, hiding in ambush and then attacking each other with snowballs. But it
was always a one-sided battle. Adam knew how to track his little brother, how
to find every place the kid went to hide. More often than not, young Amos got a
snowball in his face, cold and wet, splattering across his glasses, until he
surrendered.
It was all good fun,
but Iceberg always won.
Now, in the damp and
cold blockhouse, Amos crushed the aluminum
can into a satisfying mangled lump of thin metal, but
it did little to convince him of his strength. He flexed his fingers. Now, down
to business.
He was left to fend
for himself, all alone against a well-armed assassin.
And this time Amos
would get more than a snowball in his face if he was caught.
47
FEELING AS IF HE had completed a marathon, Iceberg climbed the last fifteen steps
to level 195. They were by far the hardest. He could barely keep himself
conscious with all the pain, all the exhaustion . . . but if he slipped, he had
a long way to fall.
Iceberg shook a drizzle of sweat from his short, dark hair. Pin-sized gnats and voracious mosquitoes buzzed around his head. The hard rifle dug between his shoulder blades, growing heavier by the moment. He was tempted just to shrug it off and let it fall, but even that seemed to take too much effort.
He pulled himself up
the endless stairs using the metal railing, keeping the weight off his cracked
and soggy cast, lifting his body to balance on one foot before moving to the
next step. The dissolving Fiberglas and plaster of Paris inside the cast made a
slimy muck around the sensitive skin of his swollen foot—but he had so many
other discomforts that one more didn't make much difference. He just wished he
had swallowed a few more buffered aspirin before this whole mess started.
The gantry's crew
access arm wasn't more than ten feet from him, but it seemed to stretch away
with every step. In the distance, Iceberg saw rows of cars blocking every road
into the massive space complex. Whoever this Phillips character was, he had
NASA security standing around with their thumb up their ass.
Just a little
farther. Grunting, he staggered up the last few metal stairs. He felt his biceps
aching, his hands burning, his legs trembling, his foot shouting with pain.
Hold out a another few feet—
"Colonel Friese?
I don't believe it! Good God alive, am I glad to see you!" Dr. Marc
Franklin's voice called from above. The disheveled astronaut peered over the
edge, amazed. "You could have gotten killed by coming up here like that.
Lucky that sniper didn't see you."
It seemed too
surreal. Through an exhausted haze Iceberg saw the man who had taken his place
commanding the Atlantis mission. No, not taken his place, he corrected
himself—the man who'd been assigned by NASA to sit in the left-hand seat.
"No need to
worry about the sniper anymore," Iceberg said. Franklin extended his arm.
Iceberg instinctively wanted to decline the assistance but shoved aside his
misgivings. He had the rest of his crew to rescue and a bomb to disarm. He
balanced himself on his good foot and held up a sweat-slicked hand. Franklin
grabbed it firmly and helped pull him up onto the wide access arm. "Let's
get you safe."
Franklin inspected
Iceberg's damaged cast, his battered features. Iceberg sprawled out, exhausted.
"Safe?" he said with a groan. "I'd hate to see what you call
dangerous." He waved off further mothering. "Where's Gator? I saw him
get hit. How is he?"
Franklin shook his
head. "He's still alive, but not good. And Koslovsky's got her foot caught
under the lower railing by the escape baskets. With Gator down, I can't get her
free." He screwed up his face, looking as though he bore the burden for
the entire mishap.
"Got to get them
out of here," Iceberg said. "You, too. Right away." He tried to
stand. Damn, he felt dizzy. He should never have stretched out—it only moved
the blood to his head. Franklin reached over to help him walk down the access
arm, but Iceberg waved the hand away. "I'm okay."
"Yeah, right,
Colonel." Franklin didn't sound convinced. "Looks like you've got
everything under control."
Iceberg worked his
way down the access arm like an old man trying to walk after a car accident.
"You don't know half the story. Let's get to Gator and Alexandra."
The shuttle pilot
sprawled on his back, unconscious. Iceberg saw a dark blood splotch on his
chest, soaking into the orange jumpsuit. His upper right arm was also crimson.
Iceberg knelt beside him. "Hey, Gatorman—can you hear me?" His friend
did not respond.
Iceberg looked up at
Franklin. "We've got to get him out of here right away. Looks like he's in
shock." He wavered slightly as he stood. "Let's free Alexandra; then
we can discuss our next step."
"Right."
The trapped cosmonaut
lay on her side, nursing her leg. Her boot was just petite enough to have
slipped in the small gap between the floor and the lower railing, and now at an
angle she couldn't pull it out. "Can you move it at all?"
She tried to rotate
her ankle. "No. But I do not believe I am otherwise injured. Otherwise I
would have to wear a cast like you, Colonel Iceberg!"
"Very
funny."
Franklin squatted
next to him and pointed. "If we both lift and turn, we'll be able to pull
her out. Lieutenant Commander Green and I were trying that . . . uh, when he
was shot."
"You're right.
It needs both of us." Iceberg moved around behind her. "Here. I'll
pick her up while you turn her leg." He slipped his hands underneath
Alexandra's armpits, gripping the slick orange pressure suit.
Franklin looked at
him skeptically. "Sure you can hold her?"
Without answering,
Iceberg gained purchase on the flooring, careful not to put additional force on
his own bad foot, then grunted as he lifted. Alexandra helped as she could.
Once the cosmonaut
was up, Franklin rotated her leg, reaching down between the metal bars. She
winced but made no outcry. Blood stained his fingers. "Shift her to the
right."
Iceberg grunted and
started to move. He put more weight on his cast—a sharp pain shot up his leg.
He suppressed a yelp, feeling sweat break out on his forehead, fighting not to
collapse.
"That's good.
Let me know if I'm hurting you," Franklin said to her.
"Just get me
free!" she cried, then hissed something in Russian.
Franklin hesitated,
then quickly jerked her lower leg. Alexandra gasped as Iceberg almost toppled
backward. "One more time," Franklin said. "I think I've got
it." He didn't wait for an answer and tugged at her leg.
She gave a sharp cry.
Her booted foot slipped out from the narrow space.
Iceberg staggered
back, trying to keep from falling off the gantry. He steadied himself, then let
the cosmonaut slump to the metal flooring. Sitting, Alexandra rubbed her ankle
through the pressure suit. She staggered to her feet, unmindful of any pain.
"We must go from here."
Iceberg turned back
for his injured friend. "I'll carry Gator to the emergency baskets—"
Franklin pushed him
aside. "I’ll carry him. You can't even walk." Iceberg nodded.
The replacement commander had a point. "Okay, you and Alexandra get Gator
down the emergency basket, then into the bunker. There must be medical supplies
there."
"Aren't you
going to help us?" Franklin looked at the ragged edge of his composure.
"You're not going to stay up here."
Iceberg drew a deep
breath. "My turn for bad news—there's a bomb planted up by the oxygen
venting hood."
"A bomb?" Franklin's eyes
widened. "In addition to that sniper, and these injuries, now we've got to
worry about a bomb?"
Iceberg craned his
neck to look toward the top of the rust-red external tank. The beanie cap
hooked to the tip of the tank seemed incredibly high. "The access arm was
only partially retracted during the countdown sequence. Wonderful. But I've got
to take care of that bomb."
"Have you ever
disarmed explosives?" Franklin said incredulously. "Is that one of
your many hidden talents? How much extra did NASA train you?"
Iceberg pressed his
lips together. "I guess I'm having a lot of new experiences today."
His head pounding, he wiped sweat out of his eyes and turned to the shuttle
commander. "Look, Franklin, the external tank itself is going to be the
real bomb—the terrorists only need to use a few pounds of plastique to set the
whole launchpad off. What I intend to do is get those explosives far enough away where they won't
cause any damage. Piece of cake."
"But the elevator's
dead—how are you going to get up there?"
"What is this,
Twenty Questions? Same way I got up here."
Franklin said in
exasperation, "You'll never make it. Look at yourself! We need to get down
to the emergency bunker, where we'll all be safe."
Iceberg felt his face
grow stony. The replacement commander was showing his true colors as a whiner,
looking for problems instead of solving them. "I'm going. Now help
Alexandra get Gator down to the ground. Save yourself if you want—as long as
you save them, too."
He started limping
for the ladders on the gantry. He had only another hundred feet to climb.
Only.
And this time it was
a metal-runged ladder, not stairs.
Franklin's voice
called out. "I can't stop you, can I?"
Iceberg drew himself up. It would be easy
to go down in the last basket, rest in the bunker, and ride this out in safety.
God knew he'd done enough in this fight. But he'd come too far to let that
slimeball Phillips win. Iceberg turned and shook his head. "No, you can't
stop me."
Franklin looked up at
him, his face filled with uncertainty. "Well, suit yourself." It took
him considerable effort, but Franklin said, "And be careful, Colonel. Good
luck up there."
Iceberg grudgingly
gripped the replacement commander's hand, wincing at the pain in his shredded
palm. "Thanks."
Reaching the ladder,
he slung the rifle over his shoulder. He patted the walkie-talkie he had gotten
from Jacques, then took a deep breath before shifting his mind into neutral. He
started pulling himself up. First push up as far as he could on his good foot,
then pull with his stinging hands before hopping to the next rung with his
broken foot, hoping the damaged cast wouldn't fall apart. Just like one of the
NASA torture-training exercises. One rung at a time. Another rung. Another one.
From the other side
of the gantry superstructure, he heard an emergency basket release with a
clatter, then a high-pitched whine as the basket accelerated down the
twelve-hundred-foot-long line.
Now his crew
was safe. Finally.
Trying to ignore the
sweat that rolled into his eyes, Iceberg hauled himself up, a meter at a time.
Even this high, bugs homed in on his droplets of perspiration; birds swooped
around the high levels of the gantry, as if showing off their aerial skills.
His mind went on
autopilot, just like on a cross-country flight, allowing time to stream past
him. Before he knew it, he would be at the pinnacle of the external tank,
keeping company with a bomb. . .
Finally, he pulled
himself over the edge of the gaseous oxygen vent arm, one of the highest points
on the gantry. The KSC launch area spread out before him. America's Spaceport—a
great tourist attraction, drawing huge crowds to watch each shuttle launch.
Iceberg hoped he wouldn't give them an even more spectacular show if he messed
up removing the bomb. Seeing the flat swampland in all directions and the
gray-blue Atlantic to the east, he felt alone on top of a skyscraper. Even the
launchpad's tall water tower stood below his height now, waiting to dump three
hundred thousand gallons of water into the flame trench and launch platform
during the first twenty seconds of liftoff.
Part of the gantry
rose still higher above and to his left, with a heavy crane arm rotated out of
the way and a white-encased lightning rod pointing toward the sky. Below,
electrical towers and telephone poles dotted the verdant landscape, looking
like matchsticks. The Launch Control Center was a large white building barely
visible through the morning's humid haze.
The view gave him
enough of an adrenaline high to numb the waves of pain, but not enough to take
away his caution. Somewhere down there were the NASA security troops,
blindsided by the terrorist siege. A half dozen helicopters were visible,
keeping their distance. Mr. Phillips still held Nicole hostage at the LCC.
Iceberg had to take
it one step at a time, like a checklist. "Cool down," he told
himself. "Chill out." His crew was safe. Next, he'd take care of the
bomb. Then go get Phillips.
"Break's
over," he said, checking his watch. The helicopter bringing the ransom
would be due any time now. He just prayed that he had enough time to disarm the
explosives first. Once he got his money, Mr. Phillips just might punch the
detonator anyway.
He unslung his rifle
for greater freedom of movement, setting it on the narrow walkway. Wisps of
white vapor curled around the vent ports at the top of the external tank. The
rust-red tanks were huge, manufactured in Louisiana and shipped by barge to the
Kennedy Space Center— and now, with an explosive device to provide the spark,
the tank contained over half a million gallons of liquid hydrogen and oxygen
just waiting to mix together and ignite. . .
As Iceberg started crawling for the top of
the tank down the narrow access arm, he heard a noise from the ladder below. He
felt a chill. Had a terrorist followed him up here? But how could they have
known where he was with the gantry cameras shut off?
He turned around, inching back toward the
ladder, ready to defend himself. He could use a second of surprise, grab the
intruder, and fling him backward off the high vertical ladder.
Marc Franklin's face
appeared, flushed but determined. "Need some help?"
"What the hell
are you doing up here? I heard the escape basket—"
Franklin hauled
himself onto the vent access arm. "Face it, Colonel, you can't get rid of
that bomb by yourself."
"You're
crazy," Iceberg said.
Franklin raised an
eyebrow. "Hey, I wasn't the one playing Rambo." He started for
the shuttle across the access arm, squeezing past Iceberg. "Just shut up
so we can both find those explosives."
Iceberg started to retort. Of course he needed Franklin's help, but with the other commander here, it felt as if he had lost control again, putting someone else in charge. Franklin had stepped into his territory before.
On the other hand,
Nicole would have told Iceberg—in no uncertain terms—that his reaction was only
so much macho bullshit. They didn't have time for a pissing contest over
responsibility. He swallowed his pride. But just a little. "Okay,
Franklin. Let's move out and inspect the tank. It would be nice if this access
arm went out all the way, but we've got to make do. I always wondered if my
gymnastics would turn out to be practical after all."
"Right,"
Franklin said simply, moving forward. He looked down at the battered rifle
Iceberg had discarded, but made no comment.
They were nearly
twice as high above the ground as they had been on the lower walkway to the
crew compartment. Plus, the vent access arm was much narrower, more utilitarian
in function, existing only for an oxygen vent hose and a lone technician to
reach the very top of the external tank. Grasping the handrails, Franklin
leaned over the edge and inspected the red insulated tank.
"Look for
anything out of the ordinary," Iceberg said as he scanned the other side
of the external tank's bulging hull. With each passing moment he felt the sick
dread grow. Franklin was probably right. They didn't have any business up here,
trying to play hero.
Chill . . . cool . .
. Boy, would he be embarrassed if he set off the explosive himself, blowing
them all sky-high.
But if he ran to
safety in the emergency bunker, Iceberg would have to wait for somebody else to
take care of the situation, twiddling his thumbs while the countdown reached
zero and Mr. Phillips pushed the detonator button. Good-bye Atlantis.
Iceberg would never
be able to live with himself for giving up. They had to find the bomb.
Reaching the tip of the access arm, he noticed a dark red bump on
the otherwise smooth shell of the tank. He frowned. The bulge was a similar
rust-red color to the rest of the tank, but it had a squarish, too-symmetric
look. Like a block of clay. He felt a thrill roll over him. "Hey,
Franklin. Look at this."
The replacement
commander appeared next to him, leaning out over the railing. Franklin emitted
a low whistle. "That's it, I'll bet. Way down there." He gulped, as
if summoning courage. "I guess I'll go get it."
Iceberg shook his
head. "No, let me. Gymnastics, remember?"
Franklin looked at
him, incredulous. "With the condition you're in, you don't look like you
could tie your shoe without collapsing." Iceberg bristled, but the
replacement commander continued, "Use the walkie-talkie on your belt and
call Security. They can get a demolitions expert to walk us through this."
Iceberg put a hand on
the walkie-talkie he had taken from Jacques. "I've got the endurance and
the balance, Franklin. You get on the radio. You're a scientist, not an
athlete."
This was his shuttle,
and Franklin was being bullheaded about the whole thing. Iceberg was in better
physical shape, better trained, more dedicated than this wimpy
scientist-turned-astronaut. He extended the walkie-talkie as if it were a blunt
weapon.
Franklin said,
"Don't be so damned independent—were you out sick during 'teamwork
training' ?"
"What makes
sense is to let the best person do the job."
"That's what I'm
telling you!" Franklin looked just as coldly back at him.
"Someone needs to dangle out and pluck that bomb off the external tank,
and I wasn't running around fighting terrorists all day. The longer you
argue about it, the sooner it's going to blow."
Iceberg set his jaw.
Cool. . . frosty . . . chill . . . Man, did this guy piss him off. He took a step
forward, then winced, the broken bones in his foot throbbing. He tried to shove
the pain away. But it didn't help.
As much as he hated
to admit it, Franklin had a point. He had to convince himself that what
mattered now was getting the job done. Not who did it. It ran against
his grain as a type A competitor, but he had to accept it.
Iceberg said gruffly,
"All right, I'll make the call. Just be careful."
Franklin barely
nodded, then eased his way farther along the access arm. "Right."
Fuming, Iceberg took
the walkie-talkie, intending to punch in the channel for NASA Security—but then
he realized that the frequency had been hardwired to Mr. Phillips's private
channel. The terrorists could hold their conversations, but Iceberg couldn't
switch to anything else. "Oh, dammit!"
The other commander
had already climbed over the handrail and was about to reach out toward the
rust-colored tank. He looked unbalanced, ready to fall any second. And only the
pavement far below would catch him.
48
SECONDS TICKED AWAY, TRICKLING into minutes. Nicole watched Mr. Phillips's
feigned relaxation quickly wear off as his impatience seized center stage. The
little man paced the glass-walled room, kicking his step stool aside as he held
his Beretta up in the air.
"What is taking
everybody so long?" he said, his voice brittle, his words clipped. He
fumbled in his suit jacket and pulled out his pocket watch, though numerous
clocks adorned the LCC walls.
"The helicopter
will be here momentarily, but I can't see a thing. Why hasn't Rusty got those
gantry cameras on again? Why haven't Yvette or Jacques checked in with
me?" He looked to Nicole as if she might give him an answer, and she
fought hard to keep a satisfied smile from her
lips.
"And what is
your Iceberg up to?" Screwing his face up in an expression of hard
determination, he grabbed the walkie-talkie again and thrust it toward her.
"I don't like this. Here. Contact your boyfriend and tell him to
surrender."
Nicole blinked her
dark eyes, genuinely astonished. "Iceberg—surrender? And you think he'll
listen to me? You'd better check his personal file on that computer of
yours, Mr. Phillips. You seem to have faulty data."
"I don't buy
faulty data." Lifting Rusty's handgun, he pushed it against her temple.
She didn't flinch as much this time. "We'll just have to give him a
greater incentive to surrender."
Nicole hesitated. If
there was any good time to resist the man, this was it. With no one here to
back him up, surely someone in the room would be able to overpower him—Yet, the
dead bodies in the corner showed just how far Mr. Phillips was willing to go;
he seemed much more jumpy than at the beginning of the siege as all of his
plans reached their tensest moments. And no telling how many more might die if
she tried anything now.
Her shoulders
slumping, she picked up the walkie-talkie. With a shrug to show him that she
didn't think his tactics would work, she clicked the "talk" button.
"Iceberg, come in. This is Panther, over." She waited a moment, then
clicked the mike again. "Iceberg, Panther."
When his ragged voice
finally came back over the speaker, Iceberg sounded breathless, exhausted.
"I'm kind of busy, Panther."
She tried to sound
casual, letting a fake drawl creep into her voice. "Yeah, well things
aren't too relaxing here either. We can't see a thing on the surveillance
cameras, and that's got certain people a bit upset. The power's been cut to the
elevators as well."
Iceberg answered, his
voice rough, panting, "So I noticed. Look, can we just go out to dinner
sometime if you want to chitchat? I'm preoccupied at the moment."
She swallowed.
"All right, let's do dinner after this is over—Original Fat Boy's in Cocoa
Beach. But for now Mr. Phillips wants you to, uh, surrender."
Iceberg coughed a
short laugh into the speaker. "Surrender? He doesn't know me very
well."
"That's what I
told him."
"Well, did he at
least say 'Please' ?"
"No,"
Nicole said, swallowing a thick lump in her throat as he pressed the barrel of
the weapon hard enough to leave a bruise on her temple. "But, um, he is
holding a gun to my head. I think he plans to do some redecorating of the LCC
if you don't cooperate with him. He's already killed two hostages."
She heard Iceberg's
short intake of breath, and then a long pause. Finally he said, "Dammit,
Panther, I—"
She knew he was
fighting for words, so she saved him the embarrassment and cut him off.
"Senator Boorman has already negotiated the settlement. The ransom
briefcase is on the way—and Mr. Phillips has got a bad case of terrorist
PMS."
Mr. Phillips jammed
the gun against her head in annoyance, but she didn't flinch. "Right now
it's time to throttle back and stand down before anybody else gets
killed—including yourself."
A long silence
followed, and Nicole could almost hear him wrestling with his thoughts. She
knew he still cared about her, didn't want to see her trapped in such an
untenable situation—but Iceberg wouldn't admit his feelings for her, any more
than she would admit similar feelings for him.
But she knew he could
never give up.
Finally, he spoke in
a thick voice. "Panther, I. . . I can't do that."
"You're
right," she whispered. Oh God, what have we done?
Mr. Phillips grabbed
Nicole's brown-gold hair and pressed the pistol harder still, speaking through
clenched jaws; then he shoved her away. "I set the priorities here,
Ms. Hunter." He snatched the walkie-talkie out of her hand and backed off.
He squeezed the "talk" button. "Colonel Iceberg, you don't know
what you're up against—"
Iceberg's voice came
back loud and clear, cutting off the little man's rant. "Look, I don't
have to listen to any more of this bullshit. I'm confident in Panther's
negotiating skills—that's what she's good at. Look to her for a solution, not
me. But if you hurt her in any way, you're the one who has to face the
consequences, Phillips."
"That's Mister
Phillips," he said with an edge to his voice.
But Iceberg's
transmission blanked, leaving only static.
"What happened?
Why did he switch off the radio?" he demanded, glaring at Nicole.
She bit her lip,
wondering what the little man would do now. Knowing Iceberg, he probably did
far worse than just switch it off."
49
HOLDING ON TO THE railing, Iceberg watched the walkie-talkie
sail out into open air, tumbling, growing smaller as it dropped. It had felt so good to hurl Mr. Phillips's
voice far away from him. “I hate
tedious conversations."
The radio fell for a
full four seconds before it impacted on the launch-pad pavement and exploded
into dark shrapnel.
Dangling at the end
of the vent arm as he tried to reach the camouflaged plastic explosive on the
external tank, Marc Franklin let his mouth gape open. "Are you
crazy?"
It took Iceberg a
moment to answer, still too wound up by Phillips's intrusion, the threat to
Nicole. His anger began to boil over, but he tried to think straight.
"We're better off on our own."
Franklin slid back under
the handrails to the access arm. "But what are we going to do? We don't
have a checklist on how to disarm this thing—if we can even reach it!"
Iceberg turned to
him. It was a gamble, but one they had to take. "I'm betting the bomb
isn't too sophisticated, just a block of plastique with some sort of radio
receiver as a detonator. The slimeball didn't have time to rig any complex
booby traps. He was too visible to everyone on the launchpad."
"But what if
you're wrong?"
Iceberg drew in a
breath. From what Nicole said, the ransom money was on its way. And the only
other option was to hole up like a scared bunny in the emergency bunker—if that
wacko Phillips didn't detonate the bomb before they got there. "Got a
better idea?"
They stared at each
other for a moment; then Franklin moved to the railing. "Okay, but I need
you to help me, or I can't get to it."
Iceberg followed,
biting back his pride. "Show me what I have to do."
Franklin squatted,
pointing to the external tank. "You'll need to crawl out there and hold my
arm while I swing out. It's just outside my reach if I have to hang on to the
railing."
"I've got longer
arms," said Iceberg. "I can make it, I think."
"Don't start
that again—look at your palms. You'll have a hard enough time holding me."
Iceberg flexed his
hands, which were scraped raw from the chains in the VAB, and still hurting
from pulling himself up the rungs of the access ladder. He took a deep breath.
Chill . . . "You're right. Let me get into position."
Leaving Franklin
behind, he worked his way under the guardrail and inched out. He studied how
the other man would get to the boxy device. If the partially retracted vent
access arm had been in place, it would have been a simple step to reach down
and pluck it off the tank's insulation.
No such luck.
Up here, Iceberg
seemed to be a thousand miles high, clutching a rickety scaffold. With him
holding on to Franklin, they would have to
swing out, away from the access arm over a dizzying
height, like the Flying Wallendas.
He blinked the
vertigo away, still trying to drive thoughts of Nicole and her own precarious
situation out of his mind. Mr. Phillips had rattled him, but he couldn't be
shaky, not now. Steady, cool, chill, frosty . . .
He shifted position
and braced himself where he could carry Franklin's weight. Now or never.
"Okay, Franklin," he said without looking back. "I'm in
position. Let's get this show over with." Then Marc Franklin let out a
scream of agony.
Iceberg whirled, lost
his balance, and grabbed frantically for the metal rail. He watched in horror
as a muscular, tanned woman—her hair as pale as Jacques's—lunged forward to
stab Franklin a second time in the back with a long thin stiletto as sharp as
an icepick.
Her face was set in a
grim, inhuman smile. She ripped the long blade upward as if she were gutting a
fish. Franklin's blood sprayed in all directions, splattering downward in arcs
of scarlet rain as she shoved the body aside like a discarded carcass. She held
the knife up, letting blood run down the slender blade, over the hilt, and onto
her hand.
"Oh shit,"
Iceberg said, struggling to get into a defensive position. "Ah, merde,"
she replied with a smile.
She must have been
six feet tall and looked even taller as she strode toward him with a rolling,
catlike gait. From the other side of the guardrail, she sprang for Iceberg and
slashed at his head.
He ducked, reeling
backward, battling for balance on the narrow metal arm. The stiletto whipped
through the air with a thin whistle, missing his throat by a centimeter.
Iceberg gripped the
bar and pulled his feet up, forgetting about his cast, about the pain, about
everything but smooth, fast motion. He used the guardrails like parallel bars
at a gymnastics meet. He rocketed his legs underneath, swinging as hard as he
could as he rotated his body.
He hit the Amazon's
right kneecap with a perfect, full-force impact. He heard and felt a satisfying
crunch of bone and cartilage. He hoped that he had at least damaged her more
than he had damaged himself.
Her head and upper
body whipped forward, but Iceberg's momentum knocked her back. She jackknifed
to a sitting position on the access arm, but somehow she retained her grip on
the thin, curved blade.
Iceberg grimaced,
closing his eyes with the reverberating agony from the impact. He couldn't pass
out now. Keep moving. Frosty . . . Iceberg
tumbled over the railing, hopping back to the main
access arm. He breathed deeply and tried to regain his focus.
The woman hissed so
loudly it became a snarl. Her ice-blue eyes flashed at him in a fury that
overwhelmed her own pain as she struggled, using one hand to haul herself to
her feet. Reeling and overbalanced on one leg, she held her weapon loosely in
an underhand grip, a professional knife-fighting position.
Iceberg hopped
backward as he watched her. She crouched and crept forward, like a cat. She
stabbed out, feinting, as if her smashed kneecap meant nothing to her. He
tottered away, anticipating her move.
"Colonel
Iceberg," she said coolly in a French accent. "You do not look like
an iceberg now—more like a snowflake."
Taking advantage of
his surprise that she knew his name, the woman nicked his cheek with the tip of
her knife, drawing a long red line of blood, part Franklin's, part his own.
He saw she was
playing with him. That feint had been meant to wound, not kill. Foolishly,
considering the circumstances, she wanted to keep slashing him, make him die
from a thousand cuts rather than kill him outright.
Iceberg hopped back
on one foot, anticipating her next thrust, but she stung him in the face again.
He felt his warm blood trickle down his cheek. Iceberg ignored the laceration. He'd
have to concentrate, throw her off balance, maybe take out her other knee. His
commandeered rifle lay at the other end of the access arm, far out of reach—not
that it would have helped him much.
He wiped the blood
away with a swipe of his hand and continued backing toward the narrow end of
the access arm. "What do you want?"
"I want your
life, bastard. You've met my dear brother Jacques. Did you enjoy beating him?
Tying him up? I think you gave him a nasty concussion." She lunged again,
disoriented from her own smashed knee. "I'm going to enjoy killing
you."
The dead-end of the
access arm was behind him somewhere, not ten feet away. The woman's eyes
brightened as she saw that she had him trapped. She tossed her knife from one
hand to the other, toying with him. "Where are your fans now, Colonel
Iceberg? No one is here to save you."
At least she was talking. He held out an arm behind him, trying to
feel for the guardrail. He'd have to time things perfectly—he didn't have
anything to lose.
His knuckles brushed
against the metal bar.
A smile grew on the
woman's face. Tiny spatters of blood from her wild knife slashes dotted her
tanned cheeks. "I am going to make this painful, Colonel Iceberg—"
She pounced, fully
extending her upper body, taking all the weight off her injured knee.
Iceberg dropped,
pushing his feet under her, bringing them up as he fell backward. He grunted as
his feet caught her stomach. She looked surprised as the wind was knocked out
of her. She doubled up, bending forward.
Iceberg kept rolling,
using his angular momentum as she started to fall. He flipped her up and took
advantage of her weight as well as his own. Good old gymnastics. With a final
heave with both legs, he sent her flying over the top of him, beyond the
railing. "Up and over!" he said.
Screaming, she
plunged down, down, out of sight.
Heaving, ready to
retch, Iceberg crawled to the side, catching sight of the woman as she hit the
curved side of the external tank and bounced. Seconds later her doll-like body
caromed off the gantry structure, dangled for a second, then splattered on the
concrete pad nearly a hundred yards below.
Iceberg breathed
heavily. He pulled his leg up, then yelped. Sweating, he figured he'd probably
rebroken his foot, or maybe just his ankle this time. Maybe both.
He crawled over to
Marc Franklin and stretched him out. Blood still oozed from the long, gaping
wound in the other man's back. His ribs and spine had been ripped open, and he no
longer breathed. His orange jumpsuit was soaked with crimson blood. His head
rolled lifelessly to the side.
Catching his breath.
Iceberg crawled over and reached up to the railing. Blackness surrounded him,
and he just wanted to collapse, to forget everything. But he had to keep
moving, stop thinking.
One step at a time.
Cool, chill, frosty . . .
The bomb remained his
biggest priority.
He heard a helicopter
flying in the distance. Squinting, he identified it as an Air Force chopper, an
MH-60, not one of the NASA security types that had been shot down earlier that
morning. It chattered through the air in a beeline toward the Launch Control
Center.
The ransom, coming in
for Phillips.
Iceberg looked down
at the block of explosives still attached to the external tank. The access arm
was far away from it, and he'd have to swing
out, holding himself with one hand in order to grab
the smooth casing. He was all alone, with no one to help him.
He didn't have any
other choice.
With a last glance
back at Marc Franklin's body, Iceberg drew in a breath to steady himself, then
climbed over the railing. The bomb sat just beyond his reach.
Keep moving. Don't
think about it.
The sound of the
distant helicopter grew louder. He didn't have much time. He just prayed the
surveillance cameras remained shut down. Otherwise Phillips would see him and
push the detonator button.
50
AMOS HID INSIDE THE cramped metal tool locker, shivering with fear. The clammy air
smelled of rust, grease, and plastic, coaxial cables and ammonia-based glass
cleaner. He took shallow breaths, since breathing made him move . . . and if he
moved, he might make a noise . . . and he didn't want to make any noise at all.
He wondered how long he would have to stay hidden. Rusty should be coming any time now, armed and dangerous, ready for blood.
It was miserable
crammed inside the locker, but it was better than being dead. Amos gripped the
fire extinguisher like a safety blanket.
Though the caffeine
from the Jolt Colas had begun to sing through his veins, his mouth was dry
again, no matter how furiously he sucked on the jawbreaker tucked against his
cheek, like a chipmunk hoarding a prized nut.
A prize nut, Amos
thought. That's me. He reconsidered running out to the dense underbrush,
hiding in the swamps where the terrorists would never find him.
He heard a distant,
muffled sound, an automobile engine that fell silent. The thump of a car door
slamming.
Too late.
Amos swallowed hard
and listened hard. His heart pounded too loudly. His breathing was like a
hurricane in his ears, accompanied by the roar of blood rushing through his
eardrums.
From the doorway he
heard the redhead's sarcastic voice as he stumbled upon the two victims of the
booby-trap explosion. "Whoa, having a blast, guys?" Rusty laughed.
"Definitely!"
Amos held himself
rigid, not making a sound. He heard footsteps, a chair shoved aside, the clack
of something metal—a gun, a big gun— bumping against metal shelves.
"Yoo-hoo!"
Rusty called. "Come out, come out, you little geek! I know you're in
there."
Amos wondered if he
actually expected an answer.
He heard prowling
movements out in the main chamber of the bunker. The thick walls blocked
outside sounds and reflected the tiny noises, amplifying them.
His glasses began to
steam up. Amos strained to see through the razor-edge line of light through the
crack in the locker door.
Shadows moved about,
flickering in a weird strobe light effect across his line of sight. The old
blockhouse was small enough that it would be only a matter of time before Rusty
found him. Man, oh man! he thought, afraid even to whisper the words.
His hiding place
didn't seem at all like a good idea right now, and his weapons were utterly
pathetic. He wanted to laugh and cry at the same time. Maybe he should just
give up and ask Rusty for a quick death. The freckle-faced terrorist would
squash him like a bug.
The air conditioner
kicked on with a roar. Amos heard Rusty bump
against the furniture as if suddenly startled; the
thug must be tense as well. Rusty had to be wondering just what Amos had up his
sleeve.
From what Amos had
seen on the TV monitors, Iceberg had made a good accounting of himself, and
several of the other bad guys were dead. How could they know that Amos had far
less skill than his big brother? "Aww, isn't that sweet!" Rusty said
in a voice thick with scorn. "Almost makes the fat bitch look like
sleeping beauty. Maybe I should give her a kiss and see if she wakes up."
Amos, livid, fought
to restrain himself. He remembered the teasing that other kids habitually
inflicted upon the skinny brainy kid. It made no difference which city they
lived in; his father's Air Force assignments had taken them from one end of the
country to the other, and the bullies were always the same.
Amos could endure the
tauntings. He always had, even if now it was directed against Cecelia. He pictured
the evil freckle-blotched creep bending over her, puckering his rubbery lips
like slabs of sliced raw meat . . . or worse, pawing all over her cold, rigid
body.
Often, his big
brother had come to his rescue—but Iceberg couldn't always be there. No doubt
Iceberg would have launched himself out and ripped the thug's head off his
shoulders and plopped it right into his twitching hands like a fresh cantaloupe
. . . but Amos had to move at the right time. It was his only chance.
Rusty moved around,
hitting equipment, clumsy and full of bravado. "Well, I guess the geek
buggered off. I suppose I'll have to go now."
Amos heaved a faint
sigh of relief. But even as the sound left his lips, he realized Rusty's voice
had been too loud, too calculated—as if the redhead meant to flush him out.
Suddenly the locker
doors were ripped open with a rattle of metal, flooding Amos's hiding place
with light. "Peekaboo!" Rusty crowed, wearing a huge grin.
Amos shoved the
nozzle of the fire extinguisher forward like a tightly coiled spring suddenly
released. He squeezed the trigger and gave Rusty a long, loud blast of cold
white foam right in the eyes.
Then, without
hesitation, he slammed the extinguisher hard on Rusty's right shin. He ducked
and slipped under the killer's arm, diving past him.
Shrieking with
surprise and howling in pain, Rusty let out a reflexive chainsaw blast with his
assault gun. Amos scampered to the other side of the relay bunker.
Rusty roared,
blinded, drilling the metal tool locker with so many holes that it looked like
a cheese grater.
"Over here,
carrot head!" Amos called, and then ducked under the safety of one of the
bulky government-surplus desks.
Rusty swiveled toward
the sound and let out another spray of bullets, sweeping from side to side like
a man with a sprinkler hose. Shots took out the wall of TV monitors and video
control panels. Cathode-ray tubes imploded, sparks flew, and smoke curled into
the air. Bullets ricocheted, zinging around the concrete interior of the
blockhouse.
The sound was
deafening. Amos reached up to pull over his desk for more protection, but the
jar of round jawbreakers toppled off, shattering; the candies bounced and
skittered over the painted cement just in front of Rusty.
"Hey, you've
shot everything else—but you missed me! What a klutz!" Amos shouted into
the din.
Rusty lumbered
forward as fast as he could charge, limping because of his smashed shin. The
sounds of the crackling electrical fires drowned Amos's movement as he crept to
one side. The fire-suppression sprinklers in the ceiling turned on, spraying
everything with water.
Rusty lunged like a
maddened bull, shooting off another quick burst—then he lost his footing on the
carpet of bouncing jawbreakers. He stumbled forward, off balance in a drunken
ballet, yowling, swinging his machine gun around—and he tripped on Cecelia's
body sprawled on the floor.
Amos stood
stock-still, watching in astonishment as Rusty went down like a felled tree,
clipping the side of his head on the bulky desk. The redhead landed face-first
so hard that even over the sparking electronics and hissing sprinklers, Amos
could hear Rusty's teeth click together as his chin smacked the cement
floor.
Trembling with
disbelief over his victory, Amos stood above the unconscious freckle-faced
terrorist, fists clenched against his hips and breathing hard. "Don't call
me a geek," he said.
Amos bent down to
check, making sure that Rusty was indeed out cold. He whispered into the
redhead's ear, "Next time, mess with somebody your own size—you might have
a better chance."
51
THROUGH THE BLOWN-OUT WINDOWS of the LCC, Nicole could hear the
helicopter approach, a fluttering machine hum that brought a relieved grin to
Mr. Phillips's face. "Isn't that a wonderful sound?" He stood up to
his full height of no more than five feet. "Like sleigh bells at
Christmas."
Nicole looked up at him. "Or the sound of a cell door slamming and the clink of a key being thrown away forever."
Mr. Phillips
shrugged. "To each his own."
He waved Rusty's
pistol around, making eye contact with every one of the hostages.
"Unfortunately," he said, "my team is now scattered around the
space center in positions that make it less convenient for an easy pickup.
Since nothing would be accomplished by spreading the blame around, suffice it
to say that none of it is my fault, and all of it is yours."
Nicole let her anger
twist itself into sarcasm, as much as she thought she could get away with, one
small step back from open defiance. "Why don't you just take the money and
run? Screw the rest of your team."
Mr. Phillips
considered what Nicole had said. "If I must, I will take the diamonds for
myself—but I would rather not leave my colleagues in the lurch. They were
willing to work on a percentage basis, and we've been through a lot together.
We're a team."
"You deserve
each other," Nicole said.
He narrowed his eyes
at her. "You may consider me a bad man, Ms. Hunter—but I'm an honorable
bad man."
"I suppose that
makes all the difference," Nicole said.
Senator Boorman
leaned over to hush her, his usually plodding voice now high-pitched.
"We're almost out of this—after all my work negotiating, don't ruin
it!"
With a crackle over
the open radio channel, the helicopter pilot checked in. "This is Air
Force helicopter Charlie niner-three on approach, bearing ransom
briefcase." The pilot's voice was soft and uninflected, evened out by the
muffled chatter of helicopter engines. "I am nearing the Launch Control
Center and awaiting specific instructions for rendezvous."
Senator Boorman stood
up from his seat and reached for the radio, as if he were in charge. His
square-jawed face smiled confidently, but Mr. Phillips stopped him. "That
won't be necessary, Senator."
Boorman's expression
grew stormy. "Let me talk to the pilot. This was my deal."
"Yes," Mr.
Phillips replied, "but I trust Ms. Hunter's capabilities more than I trust
your own. No offense," he said, his tone clearly implying a great deal of
offense.
Mr. Phillips handed
the radio to Nicole, and she grabbed it out of his hand. She could think of no
further effective resistance, no way to fight against him. And this close to
the end of the crisis, she didn't dare give him an excuse to kill anyone else.
"Tell the pilot
to land in the LCC parking lot, just outside the main doors," he said
crisply. "We'll meet him momentarily."
Nicole did as Mr.
Phillips asked, and the pilot acknowledged without further comment.
The little man
sighed, then smiled, raising his eyebrows. "There. See how simple things
can be?" Outside, the throbbing chopper noise grew louder.
"Exhilarating!"
Mr. Phillips pointed
his pistol straight up and fired one round into the acoustic ceiling tiles.
"Since I'm unassisted, I'm afraid I must do this in a more traditional
manner," he said. "Due to logistical difficulties, I'll be taking
only two hostages with me." He swept his gaze across the gathered people
in the VIP observation deck. "I think my choices are obvious. The rest of
you, into the side room. Quickly, now! Ms. Hunter and Senator Boorman, would
you accompany me, please?"
Nicole let herself
settle more heavily in her chair, resigned. She had known this would happen.
Boorman, though, seethed as if he could stand no more of the indignity. The
remaining hostages hurried into the side room, which Mr. Phillips locked.
Mr. Phillips picked
up the radio transmitter himself and broadcast on the open band.
"Attention NASA. My name is Mr. Phillips . . . the man holding your
shuttle hostage?" he said, as if they wouldn't remember who he was.
"I'd like to request that you clear the skies for our departure. That includes
your chase helicopters and tracking aircraft. Our helicopter has arrived, and
we must be on our way.
"I have Launch
Director Nicole Hunter and Senator Charles Boorman as my companions to ensure
my safety. Oh, and don't forget that I have my finger on the detonator button
that could make quite a mess of Atlantis."
He clicked off, then
directed the pistol at his two high-profile hostages. "Now then, you
two—shall we go meet the helicopter?"
52
JACQUES GROANED, AND HIS eyelids fluttered open. The pain in his head wouldn't go
away. The sunlight made him squint, and when he shut his eyes again, he saw the
pain as red fingers pressing against his eyeballs, squeezing his temples,
digging into his back. He wanted to kill somebody. Anyone would do. He started
coughing. His throat was dry. The pain overwhelmed him again, and he felt like
giving up, closing his eyes and dying—
Images of his sister
Yvette swirled around him, his beloved Yvette, with her silky soft thighs, full breasts,
moist and sensuous lips. . .Somehow she was with him.
And then he
remembered. Colonel Adam Friese. Iceberg. The astronaut with a broken foot.
Jacques forced his eyes open. He lay outside the Armored Personnel
Carrier, carefully situated in the shade cast by the vehicle. The launchpad
complex soared high above him; he must be right at the base of the gantry. He
saw no one around.
Jacques struggled to
an elbow. His hands and wrists hurt, as though he had been bound. He spotted
some nylon rope lying twisted on the ground next to him, its ends neatly
severed with a sharp knife. He briefly remembered someone cutting him
free—Yvette? He shook his head. But how? She was still at the LCC with Mr.
Phillips. He was too groggy to remember details—but she had looked like an
avenging angel.
It must have been
Yvette. He had never seen anything so beautiful, not even in dreams.
Pulling himself
upright, he had to grab onto the APC to keep himself steady. Where was his
lover, if she had come here to rescue him? What had happened to that sadistic
Iceberg?
Jacques searched the
complicated metal labyrinth of the Fixed Service Structure cradling Atlantis.
As far as he could tell from his position, the gantry was deserted.
Jacques staggered around the vehicle, swaying
with dizziness, fumbling for his walkie-talkie. He would give Mr. Phillips a
call, warn him about Iceberg's meddling. But the radio was gone, stolen.
He stopped as he
heard a scream from above him. High above. He held his hand up to shield his
eyes, squinting—then he saw the falling figure plunge from the gantry's topmost
access arm, the gaseous vent hood where he had planted the bomb.
Time seemed to
elongate as he focused on the shape of a falling human being—a woman. She hit
the side of the external tank and bounced. The screaming stopped, and the body
tumbled.
Even from this
distance he recognized Yvette. He had spent enough time studying her body, her
curves, her soft skin, her hard muscles. She struck the gantry and continued to
fall, a broken doll. It couldn't be! Yvette was with Mr. Phillips, safe back at
the Launch Control Center. Unless Iceberg had somehow managed to destroy the
plan, and Yvette had been sent to stop him. "No!" he screamed.
Yvette's body
impacted the concrete pad on the far side of the gantry with a popping sound
like a grapefruit hit with a baseball bat. The noise carried across the silent,
shut-down launchpad complex.
Jacques pushed away
from the APC and staggered toward the gantry, shaking his head, insisting that
it had to be some kind of mistake. He reached the elevator and punched the
button. Nothing. He angrily pulled the emergency override switch, but again
nothing happened. The machinery remained dead. Then he remembered that he had
shot out the controls himself.
Jacques turned to the
winding access stairs that ran all the way up the gantry, hundreds of meters
above him. He tried to step up and almost fell. He caught himself by hanging on
to the narrow metal steps, but a wave of dizziness caused him to collapse back
down against the concrete.
His eyes filled with
tears. His skull pounded, probably with a severe concussion. He was too weak to
reach his beloved Yvette. Not strong enough even to go to her.
He remembered the
times she had been at his side, when she would soothe him, pull him to her
breast, and run her hands through his pale blond hair. He remembered when he
would turn to her, after he had given his body to those men—old men, fat men,
or just men bored with their wives—and he had brought home the money that would
get the two of them through another day. Yvette would always be there, and she
would make love to him for hours to erase the pain that wouldn't go away. . .
And now, he couldn't
even reach her side.
Jacques dropped to
his knees, sobbing. The concrete radiated heat, the humidity soaked his clothes
with sweat, but his grief throbbed around him in waves. He stared up at the
gantry, the monumental white beast of the shuttle, gleaming as the sun
reflected off its surfaces.
If Iceberg had thrown
Yvette off the top access arm, then he must have discovered the bomb. A tremor
shook through him like an earthquake. He should never have mentioned the bomb.
Iceberg would never have found it, and Yvette would not have had to climb the
hundreds of stairs to stop him—where she had met her death.
Without his precious
Yvette, he had no reason for living. They'd been together all their lives, from
the orphanage to when Mr. Phillips had rescued them from the streets.
Continuing without her was incomprehensible to him. Just as her death had been.
Jacques staggered
back toward the APC, where he hoped to find his sharpshooter's rifle. The man
who had murdered his sister must not escape. Jacques could not allow it.
53
ATLANTIS GANTRY, VENT
ACCESS ARM
ONCE MORE, ICEBERG SCRUTINIZED the colored block of plastique attached to
the external tank. He didn't have much time. What if Mr. Phillips decided to
blow the shuttle anyway once his suitcase full of gems arrived? It would
certainly distract any pursuers on his tail.
The mid-morning sun
beat down, and the humidity grew thicker with each passing second, making it
difficult to breathe. Iceberg's clothes clung to his body. The soft, crumbling
cast made his left leg feel like a nightmare
from the knee to his toes, barely held together by
the moon boot covering. His stinging hands were slippery with sweat and fresh
blood, and he tried to dry them on his pants one at a time as he held the
railing with his other hand.
A cold shower would
have felt marvelous at the moment. A cold beer even better. Instead, he was
stuck with cold reality.
He tried to imagine
he was back at the Academy at Colorado Springs, getting ready for a gymnastics
meet: all alone in a huge, hollow gym, with no one watching.
No mistakes. Total
concentration. This was it.
Iceberg drew in a
breath. He grasped the railing with his left hand and flexed his fingers. Three,
two, one—he swung out, levering himself away from the narrow access arm
with his aching biceps until he dangled over empty space. No spotters or padded
mats below to catch his fall.
Don't look down.
Cool, chill, frosty . . .
He made a grab for
the plastic explosive. The puttylike brick was only inches away, tantalizing,
just out of reach. He held out his fingers and strained, grunting, trying to
unpop his joints so that he might somehow extend them another centimeter. . . .
Exhausted and discouraged,
he swung back to safety on the access arm. He panted, groaning deeply. He saw
no way to reach the device—his arms weren't long enough, and the bomb had been
placed too low, now that the access arm had swung partway back during the
countdown.
He thought about
using the rifle he had brought, but the reddish substance would be soft, with
nothing solid to hook onto. He would have to do it by hand. Somehow.
Catching his breath,
Iceberg tried again. He moved as far from the access arm as he could, his
fingers barely gripping the railing. He gained half an inch, but he'd need
another two—and two inches didn't come easy.
There had to be
another solution. Just as he had been taught in pilot training, if one
procedure doesn't work, don't focus on it; keep your head out of the cockpit
and try another procedure. Keep trying until something works.
Or until the plane
crashes.
He stood back against
the railing, looking for another way to tackle the problem. Maybe if he lay
flat on the access arm and anchored himself by wrapping his legs around the
lowest rail . . . His body protested at the mere thought, but he clamped his
teeth together and did it anyway.
Moving onto his
stomach, he pushed out until his chest extended over the platform where the
external tank dropped off. He saw the concrete nearly three hundred feet below
him. The blond woman had made quite a splash—and Iceberg had no desire to join
her.
He let himself hang
down, legs crossed, body screaming in all-too-familiar pain. Iceberg bent his
knees, reaching backward toward the tank. He was low enough, but he needed
another half foot.
He heard the
stuttering sound of the distant helicopter landing at the LCC. Perspiration
flowed off his forehead. Phillips, he thought. Iceberg wouldn't have
more than a few minutes until the terrorist would be far enough away to
detonate the shuttle and get off scot-free.
Iceberg still
couldn't reach—unless he hooked his bad foot over one of the support posts on
the railing. That would do it.
Cold needles of sweat
stung him as he thought of the agony he would have to endure. He'd have to
support his body with the broken bone in his foot. He wasn't sure he could even
remain conscious long enough to remove the explosives.
But if he passed out, at least he wouldn't
notice the long fall—or worse yet, the sudden stop at the bottom.
Any other day he'd
have hesitated, but with the sound of the helicopter at the LCC, Iceberg
gritted his teeth and scooted out, putting more and more weight on his cast.
White-hot swords shot up his leg, but he tried to keep focused on the bomb.
Rescuing Atlantis. He imagined the bones resnapping, jutting through his
skin—
His fingertips
touched the rectangular block. He tried to get his hands around the soft,
smooth corners. Finally, he dug his fingers in, got a grip, and pulled—
The bomb stuck to the
external tank.
He felt himself
sliding from the access arm overhead and clamped his legs together like a vise.
He nearly fainted from the new wash of agony, and he didn't know how much
longer he'd be able to hold on.
Iceberg lurched out
and grabbed the bomb, cursing it with a long string of imaginative insults. He
pulled, using his hard cast as an anchor—and the weakened cast cracked. Pain
flashed like a supernova in his head.
But the plastique
block tore free of the tank, leaving adhesive strips behind.
Iceberg jammed his
eyes shut and arched his back, trying to force himself back up to the platform,
feeling muscles strain to the ripping point
in his abdomen and legs. The cast weakened, softened
by water, abused by rough treatment.
He heaved himself
back around, and finally collapsed on the narrow metal access arm.
Gulping deep breaths
of the stifling air laced with the chemical smells around the launchpad,
Iceberg gingerly placed the device on the platform. His foot felt as if it were
going to burst. Right now, amputation seemed as good an answer as any.
Colors of nausea and
dizziness washed over his eyes as he pried open the painted plastic top. A
small radio receiver was embedded next to an array of wires. Iceberg felt his
heart sink. He hoped one of them wouldn't be a fail-safe device that would
detonate the bomb if he messed with it.
He had convinced
himself that the bomb wouldn't be so sophisticated.
He thought he heard
the helicopter's engines start to pick up in intensity over at the LCC. Iceberg
wet his lips. Mr. Phillips, with his diamonds and rubies in hand, could blow
the shuttle at any instant.
54
JACQUES CLIMBED BACK OUT of the Armored Personnel Carrier, swinging his high-powered
rifle for balance. It had taken him too long—precious minutes—just to get
inside the APC, secure his weapon, clear the jammed cartridge, and reload it.
Now he was ready to kill.
His side ached, his head felt as if it would explode from the
pain. His vision blurred, his skull pounded. He almost certainly had a
concussion. And Yvette was dead.
Jacques knew that if he had been just a little quicker when Iceberg had surprised him in the first place, all of this would never have happened. He could have shot the rest of the shuttle crew, massacring them in their emergency bunker if he had to, and the launchpad area would still be secure. Mr. Phillips would even now be swooping in with his escape helicopter, along with Yvette and the ransom money, to take him away.
But he didn't care
about the money. Not anymore.
Jacques crawled on
his hands and knees on the top of the APC. He positioned himself for an
unobstructed view of the shuttle. The metal hinge on the vehicle's entry hatch
dug into his back, providing more than enough support for what he had to do.
More than enough.
It wouldn't be hard.
Hitting the shuttle's external tank with the rifle from this distance should
ignite the highly volatile fuel. Jacques would ensure that his sister's death
had not been in vain, even if that bastard Iceberg somehow managed to defuse
the bomb. At this point, the bomb itself was irrelevant.
Squinting through the
telescopic sight, he scanned the gaseous oxygen access arm again but could see
no one high above. The gantry seemed abandoned.
As he took careful
aim, Jacques remembered the admonishment Mr. Phillips had given him: The
cryogenic tank has an aluminum exterior, so you will be shooting though the
skin of the external tank as well as much insulation.
He wished he had
armor-piercing rounds. The small-caliber bullets would have difficulty
penetrating the insulation, the outer skin, and then the inner tank. It might
require several direct hits.
But Jacques knew from
the model he had studied where the most vulnerable spots were located. Mr.
Phillips had briefed them thoroughly, drilled them over and over.
Jacques tried to find the tank's stress points in his sights.
Only a single bullet had to penetrate. "Just one tiny hole," he said.
"Just a spark."
He drew the rifle up
and settled back for some target practice.
55
LAUNCHPAD 39
A, ATLANTIS GANTRY
WITH NO BETTER ALTERNATIVE. Iceberg grasped the detonator wires. Maybe
he would be blown to bits in the next five seconds He'd never hear or see the
twenty pounds of explosives going off in his hands. He would be vaporized
before his brain could process the information, or send a flicker of pain.
But if he didn't do
anything, and do it now, Mr. Phillips would set off the bomb anyway.
Iceberg closed his
eyes as he yanked the wire out, disconnecting the radio receiver from the block
of plastic explosives. The wire leads came free of the claylike substance with
a faint sucking sound.
Nothing happened.
Which meant he was
still alive—and the bomb was disarmed.
Iceberg stood,
shaking from the experience, drenched in sweat. Although his mind comprehended
that he was safe, just looking at the remains of the bomb made him ill. Best
leave it alone, he thought. The experts could dispose of the rest later. For
now, the device was neutralized.
He wiped his raw,
sweaty hands on his pants and decided not to wait around, not with the way this
day was going.
Gripping the railing,
he limped toward the metal ladder, not looking forward to the ordeal of another
descent. Cool, wispy fumes that smelled like wet dust circled around him; the
cryogens must be bleeding out like crazy in the rising morning heat. The
shuttle should have soared into orbit hours ago.
Struggling past Marc
Franklin's body, Iceberg paused to stare down at the fallen mission commander.
He swallowed a lump in his throat. The space program had had its share of
martyrs, from the astronauts who had died in the Apollo 1 fire, to the Challenger
crew, to the innumerable test pilots and trainees who had perished for each
step of progress. But no one should have to die like this.
"Sorry,
Marc," he muttered. "We should have checked our six."
He plucked up the
battered rifle again and slung it over one shoulder, as if it were an old
friend. Reaching the edge of the ladder, Iceberg punched the button to see if
the elevator power had come back on—but no such luck. At least the video cams
were still out of service. Amos must still be hanging in there, keeping the
terrorists blinded. "Thanks, little brother," he muttered, then
started the agonizing descent.
Going down was a hell of a lot easier than
struggling up. He could drop two or three rungs at a time, and all he had to do
was to support his weight with his aching arms and land on his good foot.
Shifting into autopilot mode again, he proceeded carefully, not counting the
rungs, not thinking, not looking down.
He finally reached
the crew level.
Two of the five
emergency baskets remained anchored. It would be a wild ride, but he could hole
up in the emergency bunker with the remainder of his crew. He had to check on
Gator, make sure the wounded pilot was doing better. Now, at last, he could
rest. . .
Like a long-distance
runner reaching a much-anticipated finish line, Iceberg crawled into the
nearest basket, collapsing into the flexible cage. Almost there. Stay cool,
frosty. . . He placed his rifle next to him. His arm felt as heavy as a redwood
tree as he lifted it smash down the release lever.
The metallic spang
of a sniper's bullet took him completely by surprise.
"Not again!"
he cried, ducking into the basket.
Another bullet
struck, but this time the clang came from against the massive external
tank.
Looking below, he
spotted the APC at the bottom of the gantry. He caught a fleeting movement on
top of the armored vehicle, someone sitting by the hatch, his head sporting a
shock of white hair.
Jacques! The sniper
had gotten free somehow!
A third bullet
crashed against the rust-red tank. And Iceberg realized that Jacques wasn't
shooting at him.
Jacques was
intentionally trying to hit the external tank!
Iceberg smashed down
the lever, and the emergency basket disengaged from the dock. With a
high-pitched whine the basket catapulted down the wire. He sped away, picking
up speed as he flew toward the emergency bunkers. He felt as if rocket engines
were shoving him along.
Iceberg gripped the
basket's rim and watched the gantry recede as he continued to accelerate. The
shuttle looked hazy and pristine through the humidity.
Below, Jacques
continued shooting.
The hydrogen in the
external tank was extremely volatile. Visions of the Hindenberg explosion
raced through his head. If Jacques bored through the tank, the fireball would
engulf him in a second before he could ever reach the emergency bunker.
The ground rushed
toward him. The safety net at the bottom looked incredibly flimsy. He braced
himself, keeping his head rigid against the basket's padded backboard. He
pushed his arms against the seat, waiting for the impact.
Another shot rang
out.
Iceberg slammed
against the back of the basket, swept up in the catch-net as he crashed to the
ground.
Without an instant's
delay to recover from the shock, he clambered over the side, kicking out with
his good leg. He rolled to the ground and
pushed up, gritting his teeth at the pain. So, what
was another broken bone or two?
He heard the distant
thuds of bullets as Jacques continued shooting.
Iceberg almost
collapsed, but he forced himself to go on. Any hesitation and he'd die. He
threw himself against the vaultlike door of the emergency bunker, and bounced
back.
It didn't open.
He worked at the
lever, frantically trying to get in. Was it jammed? The tightness in his
stomach almost crippled him. Why wouldn't it open? He used the butt of his
rifle to pound on the door.
Suddenly, the heavy
hatch opened from the inside, and Alexandra Koslovsky grabbed at him.
"Colonel Iceberg! Come in quickly!"
At the APC, Jacques shot his rifle one more time. This time, the
bullet struck home.
56
JACQUES SAW THE BULLET strike, and he knew he had found the mark. He never
heard the sound. His brain could not process the events that took place in less
than a thousandth of a second. Insulation sprayed out as the bullet broke
through the aluminum wall of the external tank.
Spark.
Ignition.
Fueled by tons of
liquid oxygen in the cryogenic tank just above the hydrogen, the fireball
engulfed the entire pad. In a second, a flaming storm of terrifying strength
vaporized and melted the majority of the gantry.
Atlantis blazed.
Before Jacques could
blink, the shock wave from the explosion imploded him, pulverizing his bones,
crushing his internal organs like a meat mallet.
Then the fireball swallowed him up,
blasting the Armored Personnel Carrier aside and torching the rest of launchpad
39A.
Inside the emergency bunker, Iceberg collapsed. Alexandra
Koslovsky and Major Arlan Burns slammed the door shut just as the ground started
moving.
Less than a second
later they were all slammed to the bunker floor as a shock wave rocked the
building. A deafening white-noise roar thundered through the enclosed shelter,
deafening despite the heavy fortification and insulation.
The lights blinked and went out, leaving
the Atlantis crew in suffocating darkness.
But the noise outside
went on and on.
57
THE HUGE EXPLOSION OF Atlantis on the launchpad was so spectacular that, even three miles away,
it bathed the LCC in bright yellow-and-orange light. The fireball roared upward
and outward with equal speed, as if the terrorists had dropped an atomic bomb
on Kennedy Space Center.
It took several seconds for the distance-damped boom to rattle the shutters of the observation deck. Nicole felt the brief overpressure wave pass through the windows that had already shattered in the explosion of the much closer VAB.
If Nicole had had any
sense, if her reactions had been as finely tuned and high strung as an
astronaut's were supposed to be, she could have lunged sideways and
tackled Mr. Phillips in that instant, ending the whole situation. But for a
brief eternity it seemed that no one could move, no one could respond with more
than openmouthed astonishment, their faces flat, gaping in horror and
disbelief. Even Senator Boorman seemed profoundly affected.
Mr. Phillips stared
at the detonation control box in his left hand, as if it had betrayed him.
"But I didn't push the button! I didn't push it!"
Nicole suddenly came
to her senses, and she coiled, ready to spring. Something had gone wrong, and
Mr. Phillips was screwed. His plan had fizzled. The little man could salvage
nothing now . . . and he knew it.
Before Nicole could
move, though, the terrorist snapped his pistol around and fired into the
Plexiglas observation walls that angled out into the upper firing floor. He
shot out the static-filled video monitors and blasted one of the telephone
banks in front of him. The observation deck filled with smoke, shards, sparks,
and screams. The gunshots killed all thoughts of resistance.
Mr. Phillips grabbed
Nicole's arm, yanking her in front of him next to Boorman. "Quickly now.
Time to go, so don't dawdle." He buried the Beretta in the small of her
back, and she heard the sound of him quickly reloading. "I believe in
happy endings, don't you?"
He pushed Nicole
forward. She and the senator stumbled down three flights of stairs into the
lobby. Behind them she still heard the quiet sounds of terror mixed with relief
as the other hostages found themselves still alive, sobbing, babbling . . .
possibly even free. From the yells and rattling sounds inside the sealed-off
firing room, Nicole suspected it might be only a matter of moments before the
rest of the technicians managed to batter their way out—but it would be too
late.
Downstairs, through
the LCC lobby windows, she spotted the Air Force helicopter that had just
landed on the hot asphalt out front. With its rotors still turning, it appeared
to have been shielded from the blast by the Launch Control Center itself.
The sky was china
blue, and the sun pounded down—a great day for a space launch. But everything
had gone wrong.
In the lobby Mr.
Phillips dashed over to one of the padded blue chairs beside a scale model of the
VAB. He reached down to pull up a canvas satchel. "Ah, thank you,
Rusty," he said. At Nicole's blank expression, Mr. Phillips said lightly,
"Two more of those Stinger missiles. Just in case we run into further
difficulties." Her heart sank. "They're really quite versatile
weapons."
The little man's
flushed face sparkled with perspiration. He seemed to have passed beyond his
ability to maintain a cool demeanor and had fallen into some sort of manic
routine. "Contingency plans, contingency plans!" Cradling the satchel
of tiny missiles under one arm, he gestured with the pistol. "Out you go
to the parking lot. Our ride is waiting for us." The helicopter had
settled onto an open space on the blacktop. The rotor blades still spun slowly,
like an aborigine's bolo. Boorman instinctively bent low and shuffled forward
in a ducklike run across the short distance to the waiting helicopter. Nicole
followed, prodded from behind by Mr. Phillips's gun.
She tried to look for
NASA security, but they were either well hidden or not around. Close behind her
Mr. Phillips's polished shoes slapped the pavement—as if concerned that snipers
might take him out as he rushed toward his escape craft. No shots rang out, though.
Senator Boorman
climbed into the helicopter and squeezed into the back; Nicole quickly
followed. Still holding the pistol on them, Mr. Phillips grabbed the passenger
side of the open-framed helicopter and hauled himself in. A lone pilot sat inside
the cockpit wearing a helmet and a dark green flight jacket. His expression was
unreadable behind mirrored sunglasses.
Mr. Phillips turned
his pistol on the pilot. "Are my pretty gems in here?"
With a leather-gloved
hand, the pilot indicated a reinforced briefcase on the passenger's seat.
"Right there, just what you asked for."
"Looks like the
right size," Mr. Phillips said. He hauled it forward with a grunt.
"My, it's heavy!" He snapped it open and stared at stacks and stacks
of small plastic packets that contained glittering gems of various hues and
colors. He ran his fingers through the packets, glancing at gem after gem. His
lips curved upward in a grin, like a man ransacking a pirate's treasure.
Nicole said from the
back, "I thought you were going to use your loupe and your gemology
expertise to check all the gems. Go ahead— we've got plenty of time." Where
was Security?
He frowned at her.
"Oh no, that was just a bluff." He looked over at the pilot. "Do I have
your personal word of honor that all the ransom is there, as I requested?"
The pilot looked
surprised by the question. "Yeah, it's there."
"Good," Mr.
Phillips said, clicking the briefcase shut again. "Thank you. That will be
all." He pointed the pistol and shot the pilot twice in the chest.
Nicole cried out in
utter shock, while the flabbergasted senator sat beside her, his big-knuckled hands hanging
like wrecking balls at his sides.
"But what?"
Boorman said, his mouth opening and closing like a fish out of water.
"What. . . why—?"
Mr. Phillips looked
coldly at him. "I would think the distinguished gentleman could be a bit
more articulate." He bent down quickly, savagely, to yank the zipper of
the pilot's jacket. Opening it up, he revealed that the pilot carried a
concealed pistol and an FBI badge-wallet in his pocket. "Just can't trust
anyone these days."
Twisting his shoulder
in a Quasimodo motion, Mr. Phillips slung the satchel of missiles and launcher
tube into the back passenger compartment. He reached to grab the pilot's
bloodied green jacket and pushed the body out of the seat, dumping the dead man
unceremoniously onto the parking lot.
Nicole felt numb
until, unbidden, a derisive laugh came from her lips. "Now how are you
going to get away, Phillips?" she said, intentionally leaving off the
‘Mister.’ "You don't even have a pilot."
"I wouldn't
leave such a critical detail to chance, Ms. Hunter." He smiled at her. The
oiled strands of his hair were now out of place, protruding in spiky dark
wires. His suit looked very rumpled. “You will be my
pilot."
Nicole tried to control her shock. "Me? I can't fly a helicopter. I'm the Launch Director. I'm just a manager, a desk jockey—"
"You
underestimate yourself." Mr. Phillips yanked out the charcoal-gray PDA
from his pocket, but he didn't bother to flip open the screen. "As I told
you before, I do not buy faulty data. You may be an administrator now,
but you were rated to pilot this helicopter during your Naval aviator training.
You are going to fly us out of here yourself."
When she didn't
answer he smiled. "We had a saying on the trading floor: 'In science, you
can afford to be wrong as long as you're not stupid; in business, you can
afford to be stupid as long as you're not wrong.' I, Ms. Hunter, am neither
stupid nor wrong. So get moving. Now."
She sat like a
statue, knowing he was right and knowing he had her exactly pegged. Flying this
thing was like riding a bicycle—she might be rusty, but she'd never forget how.
She couldn't say anything to argue with him.
At gunpoint, she
squeezed to the front, sat in the left-hand seat of the helicopter, and grasped
the controls.
58
ICEBERG LIFTED HIS HEAD when the ground-splitting noise stopped. He sat speechless
in shock, but one of the other crewmembers shouted, halfway between a scream
and a wail of despair. The two Russian mission specialists chattered furiously
with each other.
Burns slumped back down onto the bunker floor. "Damn, they blew it up anyway!"
A red emergency light
glowed above the heavily reinforced door; the air-recirculation system chugged in the
background, running off batteries stored in a deep cache beneath the thick
concrete floor.
Iceberg coughed,
unable to believe what he had heard. He hung his head in his hands. Atlantis
was destroyed, even after he had disarmed the bomb! Sometimes, life just
wasn't fair.
Alexandra still
gripped him tightly, as though unwilling to give up the sanctuary of having
another human being so close. Iceberg squeezed her arm, and she loosened her
grip. She didn't say a word.
The bunker was cool
and refreshing after the last four crazy hours— a refuge from the outside
insanity. Iceberg didn't venture to speak, knowing that once he did, he'd have
to return to the real world of friends dying and futures shattered.
Atlantis had
exploded after all, destroyed in a fireball that had nearly engulfed him as
well. He wanted to stagger back outside to stare at the holocaust—but he knew
that for a while the launchpad would remain a hellish inferno, swirling with
toxic fumes. For the moment they were stuck in the bunker, helpless.
"Gator's still
unconscious." Arlan Burns's voice broke the silence. He stood behind them,
the red emergency light casting deep shadows across his face. "What about
Dr. Franklin?"
Iceberg shook his
head. "He didn't make it." Franklin's body would have been
incinerated in the shuttle explosion, a fitting funeral for an astronaut, he
supposed.
Burns nodded stiffly.
Alexandra moaned, and the other crewmembers murmured in disbelief. "This
is just too much," said Purvis, the other payload specialist. "Just
too much."
At the moment it felt
as if Iceberg had never left his crew at all. They all waited for him to speak,
to tell them what to do.
Grunting, Iceberg
attempted to stand. An avalanche of pain nearly bowled him back over, but he
held on to Alexandra for support. Burns stepped over to him and draped
Iceberg's other arm around his shoulder. "Come on, let's go see
Gator." The three hobbled over to the injured pilot. Stretched out on the
floor, Gator Green groaned softly. He kept his eyes shut and his head lolled to
the side. Purvis knelt by the pilot, looking helplessly at an open first-aid
kit. "I did what I could, stopped the bleeding a little—but we have to get
him to a doctor. Fast."
Iceberg nodded,
drawing in cold breaths, trying to focus his concentration. "Yeah, that
would be a fine idea. If we could get out of here."
Purvis called from
the front. "Hey, Iceberg—the alarm light's off. Do you really think it's
okay to evacuate?"
"Let's get that
door open," Iceberg said. "I suppose NASA isn't going to waste any
time sending rescue choppers out here." He shook his head in dismay. With Atlantis
gone, the terrorists didn't have much of a bargaining chip left.
Except Nicole.
The other two
cosmonauts turned the sealing mechanism and pushed open the heavy bunker door.
Hot air and sunlight spilled in, filled with chemical smoke and crackling
flames from the launchpad. A smoke alarm in the ceiling began to shrill.
"I had planned
on being in orbit by now," Burns said, staring stunned at the bunker wall.
Iceberg coughed as
the door opened wider. His eyes hardened as he looked out at the destruction.
The explosion had
destroyed most of the Fixed Service Structure and obliterated Atlantis. Black-and-gray
smoke boiled into the sky, and flames still licked the wreckage of the gantry.
An orange cloud drifted out to sea. A sharp, acidic smell rolled into the
bunker. It made the VAB inferno look like a Boy Scout campfire.
"And Phillips
still wins in the end," Iceberg said bitterly. He clenched his raw fists,
feeling helpless. But what about Nicole?
He heard the faint
chopping of helicopters, growing louder. Sirens warbled in the background.
His stomach tightened. Part of him wanted to slam the heavy vault
door closed, shut out the rest of the world. All he wished to do was sit back
in the cool, dark sanctuary and wait for the rescue squad to get them out. He'd
done enough.
Except he couldn't
leave a job half finished. He couldn't stand to think of Phillips flying off
with the ransom money after all.
And what about Nicole?
59
NICOLE SETTLED INTO THE pilot seat of the helicopter, shunting aside any feelings for the
dead FBI man who had been in the same spot only moments before. Specks of his
blood dotted the controls and the curved windshield.
Despite his cultured
appearance, Mr. Phillips couldn't disguise the fact that he was a butcher at
heart.
She closed her dark
eyes and then opened them again, trying to reset her thoughts and slow her breathing. Time to
think like an aviator again. She reached down; the cockpit vibrated with a
hypnotic, powerful sensation as the rotors powered up again. As Nicole gripped
the control stick, she let all the old feelings, the old confidence, flood back
into her. She had to step even closer to the edge, push her abilities. It had
been a long time since she'd flown an aircraft. Too long.
Mr. Phillips settled
into the front seat beside her, while Senator Boor-man hunched in back,
cowering next to the gem-filled briefcase and the satchel containing the
missiles and shoulder-mounted launcher tube.
"Everybody
buckle your seatbelts," Mr. Phillips said, shifting the pistol from one
hand to the other as he fastened the strap. "We don't want to be
unsafe."
He moved the pistol from
Nicole to Senator Boorman. "I wish the rest of my team members had been
able to come along, but that didn't prove feasible. They will have to fend for
themselves. Not to worry, though— they're quite resourceful."
Nicole increased the
throttle, and the blades spun up to a roar. In the pilot's seat again . . . in
control, like a rodeo cowboy on a wild bronco. Any other time it would have
been . . . exhilarating, as Mr. Phillips might have said.
She had flown fixed
wings a great deal during her short Naval career and had been checked out in
helicopters, but that was years ago. Iceberg had scorned her for spending the
last few months flying a desk rather than pushing her reflexes to the edge.
She pulled back on
the stick, and the helicopter edged forward as it rose into the air, like a
ballet dancer performing a graceful leap. She compensated, and the craft
ascended slowly with a downwash of air from the prop blades. She started
slipping a little too much to the side. Nicole's heart pounded in time with the
engines. She felt the gold key at her neck hit against her skin. The good luck
charm didn't seem to be working very well today.
In the back Senator
Boorman leaned forward. He breathed deep with fear, making his words thick and
slurred, difficult to understand against the background chatter of the copter's
blades. "Just cooperate with him. It's almost over." Perhaps, after
seeing so much blood, the senator had realized how useless he was to Mr.
Phillips. "Think of our lives. We have to survive. We've both got
important work to do."
Nicole turned her
chin to the right, glancing over her shoulder. She wondered if Phillips had
brought Boorman along just to annoy her. "Let's work on one important
thing at a time, Senator. Save the speeches. I've got to fly this aircraft, and
I'm a little out of practice."
"Thank you for
your cooperation, Ms. Hunter," Mr. Phillips said with a polite smile.
"Please proceed straight east toward the ocean. I'll give you directions
as we go along."
Tight-lipped, she tilted the rotors, curving away from the
parking lot and out across the wide-open Kennedy Space Center. "Why are we
heading out to the water?"
"What, do you
think I'll give away my entire plan?"
"It would help
me to follow your instructions better." They left the Launch Control
Center behind, picking up speed. In the distance they could still see the
conflagration at launchpad 39A.
Mr. Phillips smiled. "Very well. Let me give you a scenario.
Imagine if you will that I have reached an agreement with a certain foreign
country, one with a small yet capable navy, one willing to send a submarine
into the waters just off the coast of Florida. Perhaps we could fly low over
the waves, reach a rendezvous point where the submarine will meet us."
"So what. . .
what'll happen to Ms. Hunter and myself?" Boorman asked, leaning forward.
"Are we going to be hostages aboard the sub, too?"
Mr. Phillips sighed.
"While I enjoy your company, Senator, I think you've overstayed your welcome.
I would not want to be cooped up in a tiny underwater craft with you. You and
Ms. Hunter could get to know one another floating out on the water in an
inflatable life raft. I'm sure the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station will be
combing the waters for us anyway."
"Excellent
compromise, Phillips!" Boorman agreed so readily that Nicole found it
embarrassing. "Sounds like a good resolution to this plan. Everyone's
happy."
Nicole wanted to say
that she wasn't happy. Many people were dead. Atlantis had blown
up. The Vehicle Assembly Building was severely damaged, and the bad guy was
getting away with a huge ransom of jewels. But most of all, she didn't believe
Phillips would let them live.
No, she thought, this
was not a good way to end the situation.
60
A MILITARY HELICOPTER APPEARED over the concrete roof of the
emergency bunker, circling away from the smoke. It hovered above the ground,
then bumped to a landing fifty feet away. The heavily armed MH-53J was
outfitted more to secure the scene than to act as an ambulance for the injured.
Iceberg stood like a
lost, beaten soldier, the useless, broken rifle hanging from his shoulder. He
watched a second rescue helicopter circle
the devastation, an Air Force MH-60 rescue bird with
the latest emergency medical technology. The rest of the Atlantis crew
stood at the doorway, shell-shocked, staring as the rescue helicopter nosed
toward the bunker.
Ten parajumpers ran
from the security helicopter, ducking their heads, leaving the pilot and
co-pilot behind in the cockpit. One of the parajumpers carried a pair of white
suitcases, each marked with a red cross; the others held automatic weapons. The
armed jumpers stalked around the complex, securing the area from any terrorists
lurking there who might have survived the explosion itself.
The trooper with the
first-aid kit called out as he approached, "Colonel Friese? Thank God
you're alive. What's the casualty situation?"
Iceberg nodded
stiffly. "We're all here, except for Dr. Franklin. He . . . he didn't make
it. We've also got a badly hurt crewman who needs immediate attention. Gunshot
wounds from sniper fire."
The rescue jumper
pushed past Iceberg into the bunker with no more than a cursory glance. Iceberg
allowed himself to relax. So it was over. All the running around, trying to get
to the Atlantis crew. And it ended like this; talking to a kid probably
just out of rescue school.
The second helicopter
landed. More paramedics boiled out, rushing toward the bunker. Iceberg heard
sirens in the background, a fire truck, ambulances, and other rescue vehicles.
About time.
The all-out response
meant that Phillips must have gotten away, leaving NASA unhampered.
He heard no other aircraft in the sky. The Air Force should have
scrambled everything from all the bases in the southeastern United States. Mr.
Phillips wouldn't stand a chance up against one of the F-16s from around here,
not with their look-down tracking radar. But the terrorist and his hostages
could be miles away by now. Where to—Cuba? The Cayman Islands? Some pirate
hideout in the Caribbean?
While the rest of the
Atlantis crew assisted the rescue troops, Iceberg hobbled toward the
nearest helicopter, the security chopper, to get away from the frantic bustle.
He scanned the sky, raising a hand to his forehead to block the sun. He saw
another helicopter flying alone, streaking low across the swampy wildlife
refuge as it headed out to sea.
He hoped it was
tracking Phillips . . . but the terrorist bastard must be long gone. With
Nicole.
Iceberg finally reached the security copter, swaying from pain and
dizziness as he tried to keep weight off his bad foot. He probably looked as if he had been run over
by a truck . . . no, an entire fleet of trucks. Maybe he could spend a week on
the beach after this was all over.
The pilot jumped out
of his craft, the visor still down on his helmet. "Here, sir, let me help
you!" He wore captain's bars on his dark green Nomex flight suit. He spoke
loudly to be heard over the whine of the thrumming engines. "Shoot, you
look pretty beat up, Colonel—sure you're okay? Are we going to be flying out
any wounded? The rescue helicopter has full facilities."
Iceberg leaned
against the side of the aircraft, ready to collapse, wanting to get inside, to
be away from this site of devastation. The co-pilot hopped down and joined
them. "Howdy, Colonel. Need any help?"
Iceberg motioned with
his head to the bunker. "The crew might need some."
"I'll check it
out." He turned and trotted for the bunker.
The pilot gave
Iceberg a hand, helping him up into the cockpit, looking at the battered
automatic rifle. "Can I take your weapon, sir? Uh, shouldn't you be over
at the ambulance chopper?"
Iceberg shook his
head as he slumped down into the co-pilot's seat like a piece of luggage.
"This'll be fine." The rescue helicopter looked very far away right
now. "I don't think I could make it all the way over there, Captain. Just
tell me what's going on. Are the hostages from the LCC all right? Did they
catch the bastard behind all this?"
The captain chewed
his gum, popping it in tiny bubbles. "Things were really crazy. We heard
the terrorist leader shot his original pilot, then forced Senator Boorman and
Ms. Hunter to go with him. He's got a few Stinger missiles and a launcher, and
he's threatened to shoot down anyone who follows him. We flew in low so nobody
would see us—right over the treetops."
"So Panther's
got the stick," Iceberg muttered. Figured. What the hell else could go
wrong today?
The young man took a
deep breath, turning his helmet to look regretfully at the frantic activity,
the tower of smoke still roiling up from the gantry. Iceberg saw flashing
lights half a mile away from approaching ground rescue equipment.
"Nobody pursuing
the guy?" Iceberg said in disbelief, forcing himself to sit upright.
The pilot shook his
helmeted head. "We've got orders to stand down so as not to set him off,
sir. NASA's cleared the skies. We almost didn't even get this rescue mission
approved."
Iceberg pointed at
the lone helicopter flying away from Kennedy. Barely visible, it was skimming
low over the ocean. "Then who's in that copter?"
"No idea, sir.
Probably another mission."
Right, thought
Iceberg—but he knew. That was Phillips, flying low, just as the rescue team
had. The tracking teams would never pick him out of the ground clutter unless
someone followed him visually—and right now. "Let me use your radio,"
he growled, reaching toward the control panel.
"Hey, slow down,
Colonel." The pilot put out a hand to stop Iceberg. He popped his gum.
"Cape Canaveral cleared us in only under radio silence."
Iceberg bristled.
"Listen, Captain—if we don't stop Phillips now, we'll never see him
or the good senator alive again." Not to mention Nicole.
The captain's gum
popped faster. He looked around the sky. Iceberg couldn't see the captain's
eyes through the darkened shade. "Sorry, Colonel. I've got my
orders." His voice took on a patronizing tone. "You need medical
attention, not more excitement. Don't worry, sir—I'm sure somebody's got the
situation under control."
Iceberg cursed
silently. All this and they were still dropping the ball—probably
fighting among the agencies as to who had the tracking responsibility while
Phillips slipped away.
He motioned back
toward the bunker and softened his voice, intentionally looking ready to
collapse at any moment—it wasn't a difficult act to perform. It took his
remaining strength to remain calm. "All right, Captain. Our first priority
is to get my injured crewmember out of here. I think your buddies might need a
hand in the bunker with a stretcher. My pilot was hurt pretty bad."
"I really
shouldn't abandon you here alone, sir. And I'm not allowed to leave my
aircraft."
Rotorheads! Iceberg
thought. "No need to go out of visual range, Captain," he said,
"but I'd feel a lot better if you could verify for me that my crew is
okay. Your co-pilot may need some help." He sagged in the seat with a
groan. "Be sure you hurry back and tell me. Maybe bring one of those
medics over here." He winced in pain that wasn't at all faked. "If
they can spare a few minutes."
The captain looked
uncertainly toward the activity. "Please don't touch anything in the
cockpit, Colonel. Remember, no radio transmissions."
"I won't touch a
thing. Now get moving."
The pilot glanced at
the emergency crew running across the flat grass to the emergency bunker.
"Yes, sir. Back in half a minute" He dashed off.
As soon as the
captain had stepped away, Iceberg strapped in and reached down to throttle up
the main rotor. "Like riding a bicycle," he muttered. "Never
forget how to do this." He breathed a sigh of thanks for the helicopter
time NASA had shoved down his throat. Back then, being a "rotorhead"
had seemed a fate worse than death for a fighter pilot. Now it proved a useful
skill.
But flying the craft would still be quite the challenge, especially
working the pedals with his injured foot. He wondered if he was going to get a
medal for this—or a court martial.
The duped pilot
stopped abruptly halfway to the bunker. He spun around and shouted something.
Iceberg started the rear rotor. The pilot sprinted back toward the chopper,
red-faced and angry.
Out of the corner of
his eye Iceberg caught a glimpse of an ambulance roaring down the road through
the grassy swampland. Four large fire trucks followed behind it, as well as two
dark Broncos. NASA Security.
Iceberg glanced over
the helicopter controls and satisfied himself that things looked airworthy. No
time for the full-fledged checklist.
At the bunker, a
security paratrooper shouted to the rescue troops and came charging toward the
helicopter, holding his automatic weapon in front of him. The rest of the
stunned Atlantis crew watched Iceberg in shock.
The pilot ran
full-out, only a few steps from the copter. "Sir, take your hands off the
controls—now!"
Making his decision
in a flash, Iceberg swung out the battered rifle he had taken from the VAB. The
pilot had no way of knowing it couldn't fire a shot. "Back off, son! I've
had a bad day, and my fuse is damned short!"
The pilot pulled up
so abruptly he had to catch himself to keep from falling over backward.
Iceberg didn't give him time to think. The rotors caught. He
reached down to engage the throttle. "Here goes."
The helicopter moved
forward, then sideways. Iceberg compensated as it lifted off the ground and
brought the nose down. The rotors bit the air, and finally he rose like an
elevator.
The two NASA security
vehicles raced ahead of the rescue vehicle,
tearing across the grass toward the smoldering launch
pad and skidded to a stop at the bunker. Uniformed personnel poured out,
bristling with weapons.
Iceberg reached down
for the radio but stopped before he picked up the microphone. He didn't want to
receive any orders he'd have to ignore No use swatting the hornet's nest once
it had fallen from the tree. He had more important things to do.
Wheeling the
helicopter around, Iceberg pushed the throttles to the max and set out for the
ocean, after Phillips.
61
THE HELICOPTER SKIMMED OVER the tangled swampland of the Kennedy Space
Center and the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge: a strange combination
of untamed wilderness and high-tech space-launch facilities. They headed toward
the strip of sand that formed Canaveral Beach and the low, steamy line of the
ocean.
Nicole swallowed, not knowing how far they were going or how this journey would end. She looked toward the passenger seat and narrowed her dark eyes. "Phillips isn't even your real name, is it?"
The little man
laughed and then stroked his hair back in place with one palm. "Of course
not," he said, "but the name should be familiar to you." He
raised an eyebrow, but she didn't answer. He sighed in disappointment, and she
was glad to disappoint him. "General Sam Phillips was in charge of the
space shuttle program at its inception—quite an important man in moving our
nation to the next phase of space exploration. Considering my plan, it's quite
an ironic alias, don't you agree? 'Phillips'?"
She stared straight
ahead as she flew. "Actually, I was thinking more of a pointy-headed
screwdriver."
Mr. Phillips suddenly
squirmed in his seatbelt to look behind their craft, scowling as he stared out
the open door of the passenger side. Wind whistled through the airy carriage of
the helicopter.
Nicole also looked behind her—and saw the black insect shape of
another helicopter roaring after them. An MH-53J, a military craft, in hot
pursuit. Her own craft shot past the strip of beach as the sun reflected from
the waves, then continued out over open ocean.
"I said we
weren't to be followed," Mr. Phillips said. "Why does everyone have
such a problem following instructions today?"
"They're
crazy," Boorman said. "They're going to get us all killed. They
wouldn't risk that."
"At least they're
persistent," Nicole said.
Mr. Phillips frowned.
"I wish they'd bother someone else."
The cockpit radio
crackled, but Nicole knew even before the words came that this wasn't NASA
Security. The voice caused shivers up her spine.
"Land the
helicopter, Phillips," Iceberg said. "It's over. You can't get
away."
Mr. Phillips ground
his teeth together. He turned to Nicole. "Your Iceberg is quite a pain in
the ass."
Nicole nodded.
"I absolutely agree with you."
Iceberg's transmission
continued. "Set the helicopter down, Panther. Phillips won't harm you—he
needs you to fly the helicopter. Do you hear me?"
She picked up the
handset. "How could you tell it was me? Is it my flying style?"
"Yeah, I
recognized a talented pilot who's a bit rusty."
She felt a surge of
confidence. "Maybe I'll get the chance to practice a bit more."
"Your Iceberg is
quite astute about my not being able to kill you at the moment," Mr.
Phillips said. "Maybe I should shoot the good senator instead."
Nicole threw a glance
to the back as Mr. Phillips swung his pistol toward Senator Boorman. Boorman's
eyes widened as he fell back against his seat, raising his hands to shield
himself.
But Mr. Phillips
turned back to the front. "No, I'd be doing everybody a favor. That's
probably what your Iceberg wants me to do, anyway." He gestured quickly
with his pistol. "He's close behind us. Turn around and head back inland.
You can't evade him over the open ocean. There are no obstacles."
"Where should I
go, then?" she said, stubbornly indecisive. "You're the one with the
map."
Mr. Phillips peered
out the open side of the helicopter. "Head down the Cape to the old
gantries and the swamps. I'm giving you the chance to demonstrate that you're a
better pilot than he is. Romantic competition—how wonderful."
His face became hard.
"Understand one thing, Ms. Hunter—if your boyfriend captures us, I intend
to take you all down with me. You, him, and the senator." He waved his
pistol in the same tiresome threat. "It would behoove you to do some fancy
flying."
Nicole pressed her
lips together and kept quiet, trying to calculate how she might somehow thwart
his plans.
She shot overland,
cruising south away from the roiling flames and smoke on the shuttle launchpad.
She headed toward a group of tall structures to the south on a narrow spit of
land, big black cubes stacked like industrial building blocks for the Titan
rocket program. The Solid Motor Assembly Building and the Solid Motor Assembly
and Readiness Facility, named—with NASA's usual penchant for brilliant
acronyms—the SMAB and the SMARF.
Nicole circled
tightly around the monolithic buildings, but Iceberg's helicopter stuck close
behind her. She roared past the black wall of the SMAB, up over the flat roof
where she could look down at the ventilation ducts, the guardrails. Normally
the solid motor facilities would have been filled with workers—but the entire
complex stood far too close to the shuttle pad for safety, and had been
evacuated for launch day.
Farther down the spit
of land, the active Titan launch gantries towered above the swamps and the
sluggish Banana River, looking like open-air superstructures of government
buildings with high aspirations and insufficient funding. A tall white rocket
stood linked to the gantry for an Air Force launch scheduled to go up in two
weeks.
"What is this,
Panther—catch me if you can?" Iceberg said over the radio.
"More like
hide-and-seek," Nicole answered quickly as her craft streaked much too
close to the open metal gantry and the conical tip of the Titan rocket
protruding above the dark girders. "I've got no choice."
She jerked the stick
sharply to one side, tilting her helicopter as if it were an amusement park
ride. In the back Boorman squawked as if he were about to become an amateur
skydiver, grabbing for any handhold. Mr. Phillips lurched, sliding partway off
his seat toward the open passenger side, but his seatbelt held him in place. He
gripped the arm of his chair.
"It won't work,
Ms. Hunter," Mr. Phillips said. "I can try, can't I?"
"I need an
airsickness bag," Boorman moaned.
The clean white sides
of the Titan rocket curved close to them like a smokestack. The gantry looked like
a nest of metal arms waiting to snatch their helicopter out of the sky. The
slightest ding on the rotor blades would turn them into fiery shrapnel. Nicole
had seen enough explosions for one day. She felt cold sweat seeping out of her
pores, drenching her rayon suit; her focus was honed to razor sharpness.
It was an adrenaline
high she had not experienced in nearly a year. Iceberg spiraled the opposite
direction around the rocket and came out in front of them, swooping down so
that Nicole had to pull up severely to avoid the backwash of his rotor blades.
"I've got an
idea," Mr. Phillips said. "Head down the Cape and out into the open
swamps."
The little man
reached behind him to fish for his satchel of small missiles. He hauled the
package to the front, tucking the pistol in his lap and rummaging in the sack.
He pulled out one of the javelin-like missiles, then worked to assemble the
launcher tube. Cramped in his seat, he swiveled the cylindrical launcher from
side to side so that he came close to smacking Nicole in the face.
"Watch out if
you don't want us to crash," she said. "Excuse me." Mr. Phillips
finished assembling the launcher and then leaned forward in his seat, extending
the tube out the open side of the helicopter. "Just fly steady and fly
low."
From the back Boorman
cried, "Oh my God! He's going to shoot the helicopter. He's going to kill
all of us!"
Nicole clamped her
jaws together. She felt inclined to shoot Boorman herself if he didn't shut up
and let her concentrate.
Below, Georgia pine
hunched over sandy soil; the entire landscape was a carpet of greenery—weeds,
grass, creepers. She skimmed low over sinuous drainage canals that dead-ended
in a network of slow creeks that connected the ocean with the Cape and the wide
channel of the Banana River. Nicole increased speed to gain distance from
Iceberg, giving him a better chance, but he followed tight behind her.
"Here I go,
still chasing your tail, Panther. I thought we'd gotten over all this stuff."
She grabbed the
radio. "Iceberg, I'm supposed to shake you somehow so Mr. Phillips doesn't
have to fire a missile at you. Any suggestions?" She hoped he might take
the hint, that he might let them slip away so they all had a better chance of
surviving . . . but then, Earth might also cease to rotate. It was just as
likely a scenario as Iceberg giving up.
Mr. Phillips looked
up from the launch tube. "That's enough chitchat on the radio, Ms.
Hunter."
Up ahead she saw a
tall metallic forest of aerodynamic structures on display, what the Kennedy
Space Center lovingly called the "Rocket Garden."
Mr. Phillips peered
through the curved windshield of the helicopter. "Ah, complex
twenty-six," he said, "the Air Force Space Museum." He smiled.
"I tried to visit it once, but apparently it's only open to the public on
infrequent days, so I've never seen it."
"Well, take a
good look," Nicole said. "We're going to fly close—per your
instructions."
The flat area had
once been the launch site for Alan Shepherd's Redstone rocket, the United
States's first manned launch in 1961. The cracked asphalt around it encircled
several low blockhouses, abandoned control bunkers that had been used for the
original launches.
She tore her helicopter
around the display areas, flying tight around a Thor Able on display and
weaving past other rocketry artifacts that stood like metal trees: a Pershing
Missile, a Polaris, a Nike Ajax winged like a Flash Gordon rocket. The tallest
structure was the restored Redstone gantry from Shepherd's flight, painted red
and standing like an elevator shaft that had been ripped out of a skyscraper
and erected upright on the concrete.
The two helicopters
weaved around the rockets on display, playing tag in a forest of technological
relics.
"Oh, this is
doing no good," Mr. Phillips said, jabbing the end of his missile launcher
out of the helicopter and trying to take better aim. "Get away from these
distractions. Fly south into the open swamp, but stay away from the Canaveral
Air Force Base. I don't want any trouble from fighter planes and even more
helicopters."
Wrenching the stick,
Nicole guided the craft away from the rocket garden and headed out to the
sprawling open swamp again. Mr. Phillips saw a clearing near rivulets of water,
tufts of pampas grass, and palmettos. "There," he pointed, "set
down there. I need just a few seconds." When Nicole hesitated, Mr.
Phillips jabbed his pistol into her ribs. "I don't want to argue."
Nicole pressed her lips
together and nodded. After gaining some distance ahead of Iceberg, she brought
the helicopter toward the ground.
Mr. Phillips leaned
forward, pointing his launcher up into the sky, searching for a good target. He
aimed toward the approaching chattering machine—and Iceberg was flying right
into the trap.
62
WILDLIFE REFUGE
THE HELICOPTER LURCHED ON its skids as it settled to the damp ground. Nicole chose
the best landing spot she could find in the tangle of underbrush. She hoped the
surrounding trees would block Mr. Phillips's shot.
The helicopter canted at a slight angle, but the little man braced himself as he propped the rocket launcher against his knees. He tracked Iceberg's oncoming craft with his flinty eyes. Every few seconds he'd glance back into the cockpit.
Nicole watched the
man as he simultaneously tried to position the launcher and keep a hand on his
pistol. "There's no need to do this, Mr. Phillips," Nicole said.
"Let me talk to Iceberg. I'm sure I can—"
"You're taking
away all my fun," he said. He slid the missile into the tube and craned
his neck, twisting around to get the right angle.
Iceberg's helicopter
roared overhead, its engine like stroboscopic thunder. Nicole looked up past
the edge of the curved windshield, watching as the copter's shadow passed and
then circled back. Iceberg bore down on them.
In the back of the
cockpit, Senator Boorman's voice was shrill. "He's going to shoot him out
of the sky!"
Turning in his seat,
Mr. Phillips aimed his pistol with his other hand and jabbed it toward the
senator. "Mr. Boorman, you're making it extremely difficult for me to
concentrate. I'm going to shoot you if you don't control yourself."
"You're going to
shoot us anyway," the senator wailed.
"Don't encourage
me," Mr. Phillips said, giving a calmer but colder glare in Nicole's
direction. "I would also be very unhappy if you decided to do
anything unwise, Ms. Hunter."
Iceberg roared
overhead, bearing down. What the hell does he think he's doing? Nicole
thought. Was he going to crash on top of them?
Mr. Phillips turned
back to his missile launcher, squinting through the aiming circle. "Steady . . . steady
. . ." His finger tensed on the trigger.
Nicole gripped the
control stick, frantically wondering what she could do. Phillips would shoot
her if she did anything to defy him. But at least it would save Iceberg. Was he worth dying for?
Nicole was just about
to grab the throttle and make the helicopter buck when behind her Senator
Boorman suddenly lunged for the wide-open doorway opposite Mr. Phillips. He
leaped out the back of the helicopter with a splash into the swamp. Nicole
jerked the control stick.
The helicopter
joggled from side to side, throwing off Mr. Phillips's aim—just as he depressed
the firing button.
The Stinger whistled
out, but the shot went wild, arching high and down toward the swamp. The
dart-shaped explosive struck a hummock and detonated, transforming a clump of
palmettos into a fireball. The thunderous report scared up a group of flamingos
that flapped their broad pink wings as they catapulted into the air.
Mr. Phillips snarled.
He twisted around to see Boorman running across the marsh, slogging in his wing-tipped
loafers through the brown water and mud. The senator ran all-out, crashing in blind
panic through creepers and scrub brush. Mr. Phillips brought his pistol around,
intending to shoot across the cockpit of the helicopter—but then he controlled
himself and snorted with disgust toward the man's receding form. "Let us
hope the alligators eat him," he said.
Focusing on the task
at hand, Mr. Phillips reached back into the satchel and withdrew his last
missile and fitted it into the launching tube. "Second time's the
charm," he said.
Iceberg's helicopter
came around again, and Nicole couldn't figure out what the big ox had in mind.
She knew he was rash and impulsive, but this behavior was nothing short of
suicidal. Was he doing it out of some sense of obligation to her? She would
have preferred it if he just kept himself alive. Iceberg had already seen the
first missile launched at him—but now he was coming back, as if asking for it.
"No,
Iceberg," she whispered. "Go away." Was he more interested in
stopping Phillips, or saving her? Or was he just seeing red and bulldozing his
way forward?
Mr. Phillips spoke
out of the corner of his mouth as he propped his elbow again. "Your
Iceberg seems to be under the impression that he can do something about
this situation."
"It's typical of
him," Nicole whispered. "He's never concerned with the fact that the
odds are totally against him."
Mr. Phillips grunted,
intent on aiming the launcher tube. "Please move away from the controls,
Ms. Hunter. I can still see you."
Nicole leaned back.
She knew Iceberg was a crack pilot—but not in a helicopter. She had to pray
that he could do something to evade the missile as it flew toward him—and once
he had launched the second rocket, Mr. Phillips would have nothing but a few
bullets in his pistol. He was at the ragged end of his precious plan.
While the little man
was preoccupied, though, and as Iceberg's helicopter bore down on them, Nicole
saw another chance—something the terrorist wouldn't expect at all. And though
it wouldn't help her this instant, it gave her hope, a bargaining chip.
As Mr. Phillips
crouched over the launcher tube, Nicole reached with her left foot, probing
behind the pilot's seat until her toe snagged the handle of the briefcase full
of precious gems.
She watched the
dapper little man intently, holding her breath. He tracked with the launcher
tube as his lips curved upward in a grin. Finally he let out a long sudden sigh
and pressed the firing button.
As the rocket hissed out of the launching
tube, Nicole used that moment to drag her foot forward, pulling the briefcase
with her, and nudging it over the edge out the pilot's side.
The heavy case
tumbled out of the helicopter and fell into the swamp.
Nicole whipped her
gaze to the right, staring out the cockpit windshield to see the accelerating
missile buzz into the ceramic blue sky on a tail of fire and smoke.
The dartlike Stinger
spiraled upward, silently now with the distance, as Iceberg's own MH-53J
aircraft moved toward it. The two were on a collision course. Mr. Phillips had
aimed well.
But at the last instant Iceberg wrenched his copter to one side,
sliding down in the sky. He dropped by a good thirty yards so that the missile
roared overhead and detonated just above his rotor blades.
The explosion was
close, too close. Like an invisible hand, the blast slammed Iceberg's
helicopter—already on a downsweep—farther down.
Nicole saw him lose
control, go into a spin. The aircraft seemed to flare out, struggling to remain aloft, but
then it crumpled to the ground in the
distance, bouncing once.
Mr. Phillips tossed
the empty rocket launcher tube over the side, useless now that he had no more
missiles. He straightened himself in his seat once again, brushing off his
rumpled suit jacket.
"Exhilarating," he said, then carefully buckled his seatbelt.
Impatiently, he gestured for Nicole to take off. "Quickly now."
The helicopter heaved
itself off the marshy ground and into the sky once more. Nicole gripped the
control stick so tightly her knuckles whitened. She imagined it was Mr.
Phillips's throat, and squeezed harder.
"It's been fun,
but this is getting tiresome. Carry on back out to the ocean. I want to be flying
low over the water as soon as possible."
He drew a deep
breath, smoothed his jacket, and folded his manicured hands neatly in his lap.
"After all of today's hassles, I am very much looking forward to a nice
vacation for the rest of my life."
63
A FLIGHT OF FOUR F-16C Falcons roared down the runway at
Tyndall Air Force Base, near Panama City. Though the F-16s carried a full load
of Gatling guns and two air-to-air heat-seeking missiles—more than enough to
bring down the helicopter the terrorist had commandeered—they were under strict
orders not to shoot because of the two hostages. It wouldn't do to have the
Chairman of the Senate's Foreign Relations Committee end his tenure as an
incandescent fireball, along with NASA's Launch Director.
The fighter pilots lit their afterburners, throwing fire and exhaust thirty feet behind them. Airborne, they reached their cruising altitude of twenty thousand feet within minutes, leaving the Gulf Coast of Florida and heading inland.
Switching on their
Forward-Looking Infrared Radar, they flew in a loose trail formation, following
each other a mile apart across the Florida peninsula. With the FUR they could
track the escaping helicopter and lock onto their target from miles away—if
they could narrow down the general area for the search pattern. Using scrambled
communications, they gave a five-minute estimated time of arrival.
Farther northwest on
the Florida panhandle, a flight of two F-15Es took off from Eglin Air Force
Base, carrying sophisticated tracking packages that had previously been
developed to counter Soviet military threats during the Cold War. Now they
would be put to other uses. The F-15Es gave an ETA of twenty minutes.
Before long, they all
expected to converge on the terrorist's escape helicopter.
CINCCENTCOM—Commander-in-Chief
of Central Command—was headquartered at McDill AFB in
Tampa, across the Florida peninsula from Kennedy Space Center. Technically
responsible for U.S. national security interests for Africa and the Middle
East, CINCCENTCOM had the closest military command structure available for the
defense of Kennedy Space Center. The other CINCs protested when CINCCENTCOM was
given the task to apprehend the fleeing terrorist, but geographic location won
out over other considerations; too much time had been wasted already on this
response.
The four-star general
had at his disposal an awesome array of war-planes, naval ships, and ground
troops. One of his predecessors had commanded the five hundred thousand troops
used during the Gulf War. Now he had to handle one escaping criminal.
CINCCENTCOM moved
forward in his chair in the command's ready room. The carpeted, air-conditioned
chamber was outfitted with computer monitors recessed into the long wooden
table and covered with glass plates. As a half dozen grim-faced men and women
stood behind the general in attendance, the computers synthesized and
color-coded radar and FLIR data before splashing it on the huge wall screen,
which displayed only a small part of Florida in incredible detail. With all the
sophisticated weaponry converging on Cape Canaveral, a small, slow-moving blip
on the screen drew all their attention.
CINCCENTCOM did not
look happy. "How are we tracking the helicopter?"
A young Air Force
major stood behind the general, at his left, her black hair in a tight bun
pinned neatly out of the way. She would be the only Air Force liaison until her
boss, a two-star general, arrived.
"We're getting
the feed from NORAD in Colorado Springs, General," she said. "The
radar is from two sources, a ground unit at Patrick AFB south of Kennedy, and
some Over-the-Horizon-Backscatter information coming in from Virginia.
"Unfortunately,
until our fighters arrive in the area, we won't have any airborne data. Special
Operations Command is preparing to divert its C-130 that carries FLIR, but it
will take a while until they can get there. Some NASA security helicopters are
already up, but they won't be able to do any tracking since they can't outfly
our bad guy. He's got too much of a head start." She pointed at the large
screen. "Right now we're masking out all other air traffic so you can see
where we've determined the helicopter must be heading."
The slow-moving blip
headed steadily out to sea. CINCCENTCOM drummed his fingers on the wooden
table. "What about AWACS? Do we have any planes available to track this
thing other than fighters?"
The young Air Force
major checked a crib sheet she had scribbled just minutes prior to entering the
command center, studying the data for the Airborne Warning and Command System.
"We're using one AWACS for monitoring drug traffic in the Caribbean, but
that would take an hour to get up here. Do you want me to do that for
you?"
CINCCENTCOM flicked
his eyes back to the broad status screen. The FLIR and radar data from the
approaching fighters started to converge on the slow-moving blip as it headed
across the water. Within minutes he'd have overlapping coverage of the escaping
helicopter from the air. Suddenly, the blip vanished from the screen. The
general spun his chair around. "What just happened?" The young major
stepped forward and studied a monitor. "The helicopter dropped out of
sight from our ground-based radar. Could be he's gone down in the
Atlantic."
"Put the rest of
the air traffic back up. Display it all."
The screen flickered
as it filled with radar tracks of commercial airliners, small private planes,
and the helicopters around Kennedy Space Center. CINCCENTCOM growled, "So
where's our target?"
"It dropped too
low for the ground-based radar, sir," the Air Force major said. "The
over-the-horizon ground clutter can't handle it."
"So he's
rendezvousing with a boat or a sub," said the general simply.
The young Air Force
major hesitated. "Either that, sir, or he's landed in the ocean."
CINCCENTCOM settled
back in his chair. "Get those fighters out there and send me a visual.
We're not going to have him slip through our fingers. That bastard blew up our
space shuttle!"
"Yes, sir."
She sent out the order even as the general finished speaking.
64
UNDER MR. PHILLIPS'S GUIDANCE, Nicole held the helicopter steady, flying
at full throttle straight out over the Atlantic. The aircraft screamed so low
over the waves she could smell spray through the open sides of the helicopter.
The backwash from the rotor blades flattened the greenish-blue swells of the
Atlantic, and a fine mist dusted the curved windshield.
"How far am I supposed to go?" she said.
"Just proceed
for a few more minutes. You're doing fine."
Nicole kept her gaze
intent on the unbroken waves. She spotted no vessel, no rendezvous submarine,
not even a fishing boat or pleasure craft. "So where's this submarine?
Maybe your friends decided not to show up."
Mr. Phillips reached
into his jacket and took out his pocket watch, flipping open the lid. "So
anxious to get rid of me, Ms. Hunter?"
"Yes," she
said. "Yes I am."
He snapped his watch
shut and casually stuffed it back into his breast pocket before turning to her.
A smile curved his lips. "As a matter of fact, there is no submarine . . .
but we should have disappeared on all the screens by now." He made a circular
motion with his fingers. "Go on, double back. Turn us around and head
toward land again. But keep it so low our runners get wet."
"This is
crazy!" Nicole pulled the helicopter in a sweeping turn, finally letting
loose some of her temper. "You've just stolen millions and millions of
dollars, and everyone is looking for you. What are you going to do now?"
He grinned as if she
had set him up perfectly. "Why, I'm going to Disneyland! Disney World, actually."
If she hadn't already
thought as much, Nicole would have decided that Mr. Phillips had gone
completely insane. "But what about the submarine? What are you talking
about?"
Mr. Phillips loosened
his tie and unbuttoned the top of his dress shirt. He spread the fabric apart
to reveal another garment underneath, a garish floral print of blue and pink
and green—a cheesy Hawaiian shirt.
He removed his
jacket, then struggled out of his dress shirt. "Tourist disguise," he
said, raising his eyebrows as if waiting for her to congratulate him on his
cleverness. "I'm also wearing Bermuda shorts—plaid, of course—but I'll
remove my pants at a less embarrassing moment, if you don't mind."
They rushed above the
waves, arrowing back toward land. The shoreline was a blurry green-and-tan line
growing larger in the morning's haze. "But. . . why Disney World?"
she said, completely baffled.
Mr. Phillips rubbed
his hands together, then loosened his garish Hawaiian shirt, fluttering the
fabric to get himself some air. He looked much more comfortable, a stranger in
casual clothes. "It's quite ingenious, actually. While everyone is
searching miles and miles of empty ocean, crisscrossing, knowing they must have
missed something—you and I will be heading overland to Orlando. Even if the spotters do manage
to track us and figure out who we are, we'll be all finished before they can
come after us."
"But I don't get
it," she said. "I thought you were trying to escape."
Mr. Phillips laughed.
"So I will. You will land me smack in the middle of the most densely
populated spot in the southeastern United States— the Walt Disney World parking
lot! Of course the helicopter will cause quite a ruckus, but I'll just vanish
into the crowd, another tourist with a suitcase. Thanks to our timing"—he
glanced at his pocket watch and smiled—"we are going to arrive right in
the midst of the gate-opening fiasco, the craziest time of the day. You don't
think one man alone can just evaporate in the middle of all that? They'll never
find me."
"You've got to
be kidding."
His eyes became cold.
"Certainly not. The parking lots in the Magic Kingdom alone hold twelve
thousand cars, and over thirty thousand people go into the parks every day most
of them right around now. I just love trivia."
"You're such a
trivial man—no wonder," she retorted. He scowled at her but wasted no
further energy on banter.
They broke past the
beach, but Nicole kept the helicopter just above the treetops as they flew over
the wild swamps filled with lush greenery, matted trees, and drainage ditches,
a primeval world.
Mr. Phillips chuckled
and turned to toss his suit jacket in the back of the cockpit when he suddenly
froze. He spun about to look behind him, scanning the empty passenger
compartment.
But he spotted no ransom briefcase.
"What!" he
squawked. He leaned over the back of the seat, peering down as if he could
ransack the cockpit with his eyes. He swished with his manicured hands but felt
nothing. "My treasure!"
Nicole said
nonchalantly, "Admission prices are a little high at Disney World these
days, Mr. Phillips. You seem to be a bit strapped for cash."
Mr. Phillips
scrambled to unbuckle his seatbelt, hyperventilating in wordless rage and
alarm. He climbed over the seat into the back where the senator had crouched as
a hostage. He dug under the seats, practically excavating the tiny passenger
area—but the gem-filled briefcase was gone.
"Boorman!"
he screamed. Nicole stayed mute, letting the little man think the senator had
run off with the ransom. "I want my jewels back!" Livid, he grabbed
the seat beside Nicole, raging. He stood at his full height, not even needing
to duck in the low cockpit.
Then they both heard
a loud throbbing noise from below that grew to a deafening roar.
Mr. Phillips poked
his head out the open passenger side. Nicole glanced over to see Iceberg's
battered chopper roaring up from underneath, barely holding together in the
aftereffects of the missile detonation. He appeared out of nowhere, closing the
gap between them as if they were about to collide in the air. Her heart leaped.
"What is that
man doing here?" Mr. Phillips cried.
Over the cockpit
radio, Iceberg's voice spoke to Nicole. "Hey, Panther! You always wanted
to be on top. You're cleared hot for an evasive maneuver."
Her face grim, Nicole
jerked the stick to one side, abruptly tilting her aircraft.
The helicopter
lurched, taking Mr. Phillips by surprise. He lost his grip on the edge of the
passenger chair, and he whirled in one last frozen instant, staring at her with
those flinty eyes that had once been filled with cold mirth but now held only
terror.
He flailed his hands,
and his mouth opened—but no words came out. He lurched forward and slipped. His
fingers caught for just an instant— then he plunged overboard, falling out into
open air with a thin cry of surprise.
He had time to thrash
his arms only once until he fell headfirst into the blurring blades of
Iceberg's helicopter, roaring up from below. Mr. Phillips exploded into a mist
of red spray and chunks of flesh that vanished into a rapidly dissipating
scarlet rain.
"Exhilarating," Nicole said.
Iceberg's helicopter
nearly flipped from the impact on the tip of his blades. The little man's body
had damaged the rotor. The helicopter wobbled, out of control like a bucking
horse, and started to go down. Nicole's heart froze as she saw Iceberg fight in
the cockpit—his jaw set, his face stony. The helicopter lurched in the air, and
she paced him, trying to help and trying to stay out of the way.
Finally, only a few
meters above the treetops, Iceberg regained control. The engine stuttered, then
caught firmly again, and he gained altitude. He rose up grinning, flying
parallel to her, waving across at her from
his own cockpit.
Nicole slumped back
in her pilot's seat, exhausted, looking down. At least you went out with a
splash, Mr. Phillips," she said to herself. She thought the
little man would have appreciated the joke.
65
BY THE TIME NASA security teams finally arrived at the television relay bunker,
Amos Friese already had the situation well in hand.
Holding the deadly
assault rifle he had pried from Rusty's fingers, he stood watch, pacing back
and forth on the painted concrete floor. With all the video monitors shot out,
Amos had no way of knowing what else had gone on during the retaking of Kennedy
Space Center, but he intended to hold his bunker against whatever foes might
come against him.
As he had proven with
the red-headed terrorist, the bad guys had better think twice before they
challenged Amos Friese again.
While Rusty was out
cold, Amos had used a utility knife to cut several electrical cords from the
backs of the now useless monitors and wrapped them around the thug's freckled
wrists and ankles. He enjoyed tying the man hand and foot, trussing him like a
pig. It seemed fitting.
For good measure Amos
also wrapped the man's hands with a thick layer of cellophane tape from the
dispenser on his desktop, but Amos didn't know how well that would hold.
When Rusty eventually
returned to consciousness, he had struggled, working himself into painful
exhaustion. The redhead had quickly learned the futility of grumbling threats
and curses, once Amos stuffed an old cleaning cloth in the prisoner's mouth.
The grimy rag was saturated with solvent to clean dust off desks and TV
screens, and must have tasted awful.
Rusty continued to
glare at him, making Amos quite pleased.
His face haggard, his
clothes torn from the ordeal, Amos stood watching his captive. Even with the
loud air conditioner still on, he found himself perspiring so much that he tore
a strip from another cleaning rag and wrapped it around his forehead to keep the
salty droplets from running
into his eyes.
When the NASA
security troops broke into the blockhouse, they stared at the two men, rapidly
assessing the situation and wisely realizing that they had better not mess with
Amos.
The lead man, a tall,
thin Hispanic security officer with very close-cropped dark hair and a chin
shaven so clean it was like glass, nodded down at the seething redheaded
terrorist. "Just this one, sir?"
Without taking his
gaze from his captive, Amos nodded. "Yep, one prisoner. The only one
left." Something in his eyes and hardened features kept the guards from
asking more.
"According to
our intelligence, this is the only member of the terrorist team to
survive."
"Good,"
Amos said coldly. "Maybe I could be the one to interrogate him."
Rusty tried to say
something behind the gag in his mouth, but the words came out only as gurgling
grunts. Amos thoroughly enjoyed the light of terror in the redhead's eyes.
A fourth security
officer jogged in after inspecting the wreckage of the doorway. He noted the
sweater-draped woman on the floor. "Looks like three bodies," he reported,
"two NASA security from a booby-trapped door, plus this one."
As the guards moved
to pick Cecelia up from the floor, Amos turned to them. "Be careful with
her," he said.
"We will,
sir," said the clean-shaven security man. Amos reluctantly let them remove
the machine gun from his grip. His arms and hands felt numb. The adrenaline
rush was better than slamming down a six-pack of Jolt Cola in an hour. He hoped
that his brother had made out as well.
In fact, he decided
he might even challenge Iceberg to a rematch of that snowball fight. . .
66
FLICKING THE CONTROLS IN the helicopter's cockpit, Iceberg pushed the wipers to high
as he tried to get rid of the remnants of spattered blood from the windshield,
a grim reminder of Mr.
Phillips's demise.
He was lucky that his
main rotor blades hadn't broken apart with the little man's sudden weight. This
copter had been through quite a pounding already in one morning, but the blades
must have just nicked the man with the tip. It was enough.
He followed Nicole's
craft, keeping her in sight half a mile in front of him as they flew back to the
Launch Control Center, War Zone Central, he thought. The Florida coast looked a
mottled green and brown, contrasting with the deep blue ocean farther east. A
nice, peaceful place for a paradise vacation. . .
The smoldering
launchpad still belched fire and smoke, a funeral pyre for the space shuttle Atlantis.
Iceberg knew the whole world had been watching the crisis. The blasé public
had tragically been reminded of the vulnerability of the space program, that
flying into orbit would never be a ho-hum bus ride.
Somehow, Iceberg
didn't think the death of Atlantis meant the end of the space program.
Maybe something so dramatic would finally make Joe Six-pack realize its value.
NASA cost the country a minuscule percent of the federal budget, yet delivered
more than any comparable government program. Commercializing space was the last
great hope for the nation's future, and maybe this disaster would rally the
public behind it.
Iceberg could barely
make out fire trucks and emergency vehicles parked in a semicircle around the
concrete pad. The smoke billowed into the atmosphere like a smoldering volcano.
But launchpad 39B and its intact gantry still stood tall in the Florida swamps.
Endeavour waited to launch.
As he flew, Iceberg
felt utterly exhausted. His ankle throbbed, his muscles ached, his palms were
still raw, and he felt as though he had been used as a dummy in a series of
crash tests.
His radio clicked. It
was Nicole's voice on an open channel. "KSC, this is Panther in one of two
Air Force helicopters approaching the restricted launch area. Request immediate
clearance and permission to land at the Launch Control Center. Reporting loss
of one terrorist. No other casualties. Acknowledge."
"Roger that,
Panther!" came an excited voice over the radio. "Terrorist
lost?"
"Total
loss," Iceberg said into the microphone. "This is Colonel Friese,
flying wing. We are both safe. Senator Boorman is unharmed, but he's going to
need a pickup out in the swamps. Over."
The voice acknowledged.
"Proceed to Launch Control. You know the landing area—and congratulations
on getting back here. We've all been following the events."
Nicole's voice came
back. "Please have medical personnel available at the landing site—I think
Iceberg's going to need a few painkillers. Maybe finally he'll hold still long
enough to get treatment."
Iceberg wearily
clicked the button on his microphone twice to indicate he agreed.
As they flew in over
the Banana River, the Kennedy Space Center looked more and more like a
battlefield. Smoke from the destroyed VAB still curled into the air like a
greasy fingerpainting. Several burning vehicles lay strewn on the cleared
roadways. A flight of F-16s flew high CAP—Combat Air Patrol—in a holding pattern
high overhead; a lumbering C-130 flew in an oval racetrack with its
forward-looking infrared sensors deployed.
Kennedy Space Center
would never be the same. It had been a victim of a bloody attack, but the
astronauts and the space program had been victorious, though at a terrible
cost.
At lower altitudes,
the air boiled with military helicopters, some bearing NASA markings, others
with COAST GUARD or AIR FORCE written on the sides. A menacing-looking MH-60
helicopter, guns poking from its nose and air-to-ground missiles hanging from
its stubby wings, swooped in to keep watch over them as they approached the
LCC. Iceberg hoped the pilots weren't trigger happy. He'd had enough of playing
GI Joe for a while.
The Launch Control
Center's parking lot was packed with cars, flashing emergency lights,
ambulances, and people milling around. Military trucks and surly-looking
security guards with weapons lined the road leading to the Admin area. The
press stands to the south of the LCC were jammed with TV cameras, all turned
toward their approaching choppers. The only good that Iceberg latched onto was
knowing that, with the Russian Mir station waiting for supplies, NASA
would have to get the next shuttle up without delay. The urgency would prevent
them from sliding into years of paralysis, as had happened after the Challenger
accident. He supposed Endeavour—already in place on launchpad
39B—would be frantically refitted for the Mir resupply mission. Maybe
now the U.S. would take spaceflight more seriously, build on the shuttle's
legacy, and invest in true "leapfrog" technologies such as Single-Stage-to-Orbit
spacecraft.
Military police
cleared the landing zone as Nicole and Iceberg flew their helicopters in. Two
ambulances waited at the periphery, lights flashing.
Pulling back on the
stick, Iceberg signaled for Nicole to land before touching down beside her. He
felt the skids settle onto the pavement with a bounce. A half dozen men and
women ducked their heads and ran out to his copter. He released the rotors and
cut the engine, slumping back in his seat. Maybe now he could take a nap—except
the pain had tripled in the last few seconds, now that he knew he could slump
into exhaustion.
NASA security
officers rushed out of the LCC, heading for ambulances and emergency vehicles.
Several sheet-wrapped bodies came out on stretchers. Other uniformed personnel
worked together to escort the remaining trembling hostages to safety. Engineers
and station managers from the firing floor milled about, angry, excited, like a
swarm of ants.
Iceberg swung stiffly
out of the burn-stained cockpit, stepping gingerly on his one good foot,
keeping off his crumbling cast. He winced and nearly collapsed from the pain.
Perhaps it would be a good idea if he waited for a helping hand. . .
With the rotor still
running, Nicole leaped out of her helicopter. She ducked down and raced over to
Iceberg, nearly bowling him over with a large hug, which she covered up as an
effort to help him to stand. They embraced for a few seconds longer than was
necessary, then stepped slowly apart.
Nicole looked at him
for a moment. "Thanks, Iceberg." Then, seeming embarrassed, she said,
"I knew you'd be too stupid to give up."
Through his elation,
Iceberg still felt as if something was missing. He looked around. "I need
to see my crew," he said.
He had always
insisted on being the star of the show—but now the team of astronauts had found
themselves in a deep bind without him. They had fended for themselves, despite
his efforts to help. Iceberg realized that the others did matter—but that he
couldn't always be there for them.
Before Nicole could
answer about the crew, Iceberg staggered again in amazement. "And Amos! Oh
God, my brother, Amos. Is he okay?"
Nicole nodded,
flashing him an impish grin. "Yeah, I checked on the radio before I
landed. Amos had a few adventures of his own. He's on his way to the LCC. I
think you'd be proud of him, Iceberg."
"Of course I'm
proud of him," he said, puzzled that she'd even mention it. "He's my
own brother." Nicole pressed her lips together, silent. Iceberg sighed,
and his shoulders slumped. "I guess there's no 'of course' about it. It
isn't obvious. Maybe I didn't tell him often enough that I'm proud of the things he
does. Amos is a good video jockey, you know, maybe the best there is. He
understands gadgets better than anything I can comprehend."
Nicole nodded
carefully. Iceberg put his arm around her shoulder and leaned on her. They
started walking to the LCC.
Nicole said,
"And you don't know the half of it—all by himself, he captured one of the
terrorists, who's been babbling like a parrot ever since, trying to make a plea
bargain with anyone close enough to listen. He is the only one left alive of
the bunch."
The emergency
personnel approached. Two women and a man, dressed in the white shirt of
paramedics, carried first-aid gear. They jogged up, out of breath. As they drew
near, Nicole waved them off. "I'll get Iceberg inside. You just leave him
to me." Nicole and Iceberg made their way through the growing crowd to the
LCC.
"Thanks for
keeping your cool in the Launch Control Center." Iceberg had difficulty
finding the right words as they walked.
She shook her head
grimly. "A lot of people died under my watch. Two of them right in front
of my eyes."
"Yeah, and if
you had tried a crazy stunt—like I would have—there'd be a lot more
bodies, half the people on the firing floor, maybe. I'm not sure anyone else
could have pulled that off, that kind of cool control. You really made a
difference, Panther."
Nicole turned her head and smiled back at him. "So the Iceberg begins to melt."
He shrugged his broad
shoulders. "Maybe . . . just a little." He leaned more weight on her
as they shuffled to the LCC.
She lowered her dark
eyes, then ran a finger through her short, fluffy hair to loosen the
sweat-dampened strands. "I have to admit this morning was more ... ah exhilarating
than I've had in a long time. I remember my aviator days, my astronaut
training. It was tough but rewarding."
She swallowed.
Iceberg squeezed her shoulder as they walked, remembering how good it felt to
hold her.
Nicole continued,
"I had been having my doubts about leaving the 'real work' as an astronaut
and 'selling out' to administration and politicking. Those are your words, you
know." She was quiet for a moment, then looked up at him. "But I'm good
at this, Iceberg. I shouldn't have to feel guilty because I'm cut out for
something different." She touched the gold key on the necklace she wore.
"These are my dreams and my decisions, and I don't need to follow anybody
else's plans but my own."
"Especially when
some jerks keep getting on your case about it," Iceberg said with a self-deprecating
smile. "Must have been tough to deal with that Phillips guy."
"It's been tough
dealing with you too, sometimes."
A van pulled up,
bearing the Atlantis crew back to a secure area. Gator had already been
hauled off by helicopter to the base hospital at the Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station.
The crew—his crew—staggered
out of the van, still in their orange pressure suits. NASA personnel swarmed
around them. Still leaning on Nicole's shoulder, Iceberg grinned at them all.
Burns and Purvis spotted him and pushed through the crowd. The rest of the crew
followed. The group had spent so much time training together, rehearsing this
mission, never expecting the ordeal they would actually endure.
The last to leave the
van, Alexandra Koslovsky moved slowly as if she were an old woman with
rheumatism. He wondered if her foot had been seriously injured. She blinked at
the clear sky, standing tall.
After speaking
quietly with the rest of his crew, Nicole helped Iceberg shuffle over to
Alexandra. The Russian cosmonaut stood like a soldier waiting to report.
"Thank you for your assistance in rescuing me, Colonel Iceberg," she
said, seeing his beaten appearance. "I am happy to report that Lieutenant
Commander Gator's injuries do not appear to be life-threatening, and we expect
him to survive and recover."
Nicole squeezed
Alexandra's hand. "I'm so sorry about Andrei," she said. "I was
there with him. I wish I could have done something to prevent it. He died a
hero."
Alexandra nodded, her
face a still sculpture. Then, like a shock wave rippling across her skin,
emotion briefly filtered through her cold mask until she covered it up again.
She returned a brisk nod. "And I must apologize for the death of Mission
Commander Franklin. Both men died bravely." She shook her head before
continuing. "But unfortunately both men are still dead."
Hearing the sudden
sharpness in her words even in this sad situation brought the point home to
Iceberg. He knew exactly what she meant.
Ambassador Andrei Trovkin, the big
bearlike Russian, had done exactly what Iceberg would have done himself—and
Trovkin had died for it. Sometimes balls-to-the-wall action was called for . .
. but sometimes it was better to keep your head and just wait. All his life.
Iceberg had had difficulty telling the difference between those two situations.
"I'm glad you
didn't end up dead, Iceberg," Nicole said, "though you sure tried
hard enough to get yourself killed."
He hugged her back.
"I'm a slow learner, but I'm persistent."
Later, inside her own office in the LCC, Nicole opened the
charcoal-gray Personal Data Assistant she had recovered from the suit jacket
Mr. Phillips had tossed in the back of her helicopter. She already knew some of
the answers, but perhaps this contained more details.
Iceberg and Amos sat
beside her, watching and waiting. The medics hovered outside the door,
desperate to haul Iceberg off to a hospital—but he wanted some answers first.
Nicole hadn't argued. This was probably the only way to get him to sit still
for a while, and it felt good to be comfortable next to him after so many
months of brooding tension between them.
Though the
computerized device was small and hand held, its hard disk was crammed with
information, useful data she could unlock to determine just what had driven the
dapper little man to such a bizarre plan. It would take months to unravel it
all, but some of the details might be close to the surface, where Mr. Phillips
could gloat over them.
She handed the PDA over to Amos.
"You're the expert, Amos," Nicole said. "He told me his name
wasn't Mr. Phillips."
"Thanks."
Amos set right to work, using the blunt plastic stylus to call up file after
file. Nicole leaned over and squinted at the murky liquid crystal display,
studying the information.
NASA security marched
through the LCC halls, trying to put a lid back on the situation. The FBI
milled throughout the building. It would only be a matter of minutes before
NASA Headquarters, the White House, Congress, and all the security forces in
the free world would start clamoring for attention. Not to mention the
reporters.
"This is the
real stuff here," Amos said. "His name was Thomas Carrington Benchley
Jr. Man oh man, what an ego."
Nicole stared down at
the letters on the PDA screen. "Typical."
Amos said, "I'll
cross-check his personal files." He tapped with the stylus, opening up one
journal entry after another. Memos, logs, strident letters to investment
companies. "We'll need to verify the leads, but it's a good guess he
didn't expect anyone else to find this information. His mother died when he was
young and left him with quite an inheritance. Looks like he was an upper-class
kid, an only child."
Iceberg leaned back
in his creaking government chair, wincing in pain. "No surprise
there."
From NASA security,
she had already heard part of Rusty's story— that "Phillips" was once
a high-powered rogue trader on Wall Street who had dumped everything into
initial public offerings of high-tech industries and aerospace, hoping for that
big breakthrough . . . but his money went faster than the breakthrough came. He
had lost his shirt on those investments and got screwed in bad trades,
big-time.
Publicly, he had lost
the whole family fortune, two hundred million dollars. His wife and kids were
now eating Chef Boyardee and eking out a Spartan lifestyle, barely getting
along on what little insurance he left them. Nicole bet they didn't have fond
memories of their dad.
But he had made other
illegal deals, other contingencies, so that he came out with a golden nest egg
. . . and a whole new identity.
Iceberg heaved a deep
breath. "Good thing he wasn't any more successful at the new career than
he was in the old one."
Amos chuckled.
"Well, his bank account isn't getting any bigger today."
Nicole laughed out
loud. "That's for sure. They'll find that suitcase of gemstones as soon as
they track down Senator Boorman out in the swamps."
A rap came at the
door. "Ms. Hunter, we really need to get Colonel Friese to the
hospital."
"How long are
those medics going to make me stay in an uncomfortable bed with sheets that
smell like bleach?" Iceberg said.
Nicole smothered a
grin. "Not long enough."
Amos straightened his
round-lensed glasses and winked at Nicole. "Hey, if you're going to be
eating hospital food for a few weeks, how about we all sneak out for some Fat
Boy's barbecue? Then, while he's stuffed and satisfied, the medics will be able
to operate on him without him feeling the pain!"
Iceberg leaned
forward and tried to punch his little brother on the shoulder, but his joints
were too stiff and sore to even make a fist. He fell back against his seat and
groaned, finally unable to function. Amos and Nicole laughed as the medics came
in to take Iceberg away.
67
MERRITT ISLAND
NATIONAL
WILDLIFE REFUGE
THE MILLIONS OF HUNGRY creatures in the swamp made a deafening racket. Thousands
of individual voices, each one disgusting or frightening or threatening in its
own way: whining bugs, croaking frogs, biting insects, buzzing gnats. Water
trickled and splashed. Creatures moved through the underbrush, large ones,
dangerous ones, unseen predators.
Senator Boorman clung to the rough bark of the tree. Spanish moss dangled just out of reach, infested with all-too-large spiders. Ants crawled on his hands and legs. He had given up trying to brush them off, because other things preoccupied him.
He had climbed to
what he hoped was safety in the dense branches of a Georgia pine, bothered by
sharp evergreen needles and sticky resin that clung to his clothes and the
palms of his hands. Boorman thought of multicolored coral snakes slithering
through the branches . . . large and deadly Florida panthers just waiting for a
free lunch . . . long-tusked wild boars that were so prevalent they left
ripped-up patches of grass all across the site.
Boorman was wet,
exhausted, hungry, and caked with mud and swamp slime . . . in short, utterly
miserable. And the pine tree he had climbed in desperation was not actually
very tall after all.
Two enormous bull
alligators waited in the grassy area that surrounded the gnarled tree, their
backs lumpy with ridges, their skin black as demons of night.
Both gators yawned
wide, showing the pinkish insides of their cavernous gullets, flashing enough
wicked teeth to line all the freeways in Nebraska. They had treed him on his
headlong flight, but they refused to go away. The snorting alligators continued
circling the trunk . . . waiting, smelling their quarry above.
Boorman swallowed. He
hoped rescue would come soon.
He searched the sky,
squinting. The sun was bright, and the air was clear—but he saw no circling
helicopters, no search parties beating the bushes to find him and take him away
from all this.
They had to
know where he was. They had to come find him. Somebody would come.
He knew they would want to rescue him. He hoped they would
rescue him. He was a United States senator, after all.
Boorman looked down
again and clung to the tree so tightly that the bark hurt his hands. Those
alligators down there appeared to be getting hungrier every minute.
He looked up to the
sky again and waited.