I looked at my watch. The bombs should have gone off twenty minutes ago. I had been asleep over an hour.
I slowly rose from the floor on which I had been sitting, so stiff and sore I could hardly move. I picked up the grenades and pocketed them. Moving as carefully and quietly as I could, I got up on the railing, put my leg up to climb onto the roof.
The rifle slipped off my shoulder. I grabbed for the strap and was so sore I damn near dropped it.
The courtyard was thirty feet below. I teetered on the railing, the rifle hanging by a strap from my right forearm, the rucksack dangling, every muscle I owned screaming in protest.
Then I was safely up, pulling all that damn gear along with me.
Taking my time, I spread out the gear, got out the grenades, and placed them where I could easily reach them.
I took a long drink from my canteen, then screwed the lid back on and put it away.
The radio that controlled the bombs was not large. I set the frequency very carefully, turned the thing on, and let the capacitor charge. When the green light came on, I gingerly set the radio aside.
Three minutes later, a muffled bang from the bomb behind the shortwave radio slapped the air.
I lay down on the roof and gripped the rifle. Running feet. Shouts. Shouts in Arabic.
It didn't take them long to zero in on the radio room. I heard running feet, several men, pounding along the corridor.
They didn't spend much time in there looking at the remains of King Kong or the shortwave. More shouts rang through the building.
Julie Giraud and I had argued about what would happen next. I predicted that these guys would panic, would soon decide that the logical, best course of action was a fast plane ride back to civilization. I suspected they were bureaucrats at heart, string-pullers. Julie thought they might be warriors, that their first instinct would be to fight. We would soon see who was right.
I could hear the voices bubbling out of the courtyard, then what sounded like orders given in a clean, calm voice. That would never do. I pulled the pin from a grenade, then threw it at the wall on the other side of the courtyard.
The grenade struck the wall, made a noise that attracted the attention of the people below, then exploded just before it hit the ground. A scream. Moans.
I tossed a second grenade, enjoyed the explosion, then hustled along the rooftop. I lay down beside a chimney in a place that allowed me to watch the rest of the roof and the area just beyond the main gate.
From here I could also see the planes parked on the airfield, gleaming brightly in the morning sun.
Someone stuck his head over the edge of the roof. He was gone too quick for me to get around, but I figured he would pop up again with a weapon of some kind, so I got the Model 70 pointed and flicked off the safety. Sure enough, fifteen seconds later the head popped back up and I squeezed off a shot. His body hit the pavement thirty feet below with a heavy plop.
The Land Rover could not carry them all, of course. Still, I thought this crowd would go for it as if it were a lifeboat on the Titanic. I was not surprised to hear the engine start even though I had tossed two grenades into the courtyard where the vehicle was parked: The Rover was essentially impervious to shrapnel damage, and should run for a bit, at least, as long as the radiator remained intact.
Angry shouts reached me. Apparently the Rover driver refused to wait for a full load.
I kept my head down, waited until I heard the Rover clear the gate and start down the road. Then I pushed the button on the radio control.
The explosion was quite satisfying. In about half a minute a column of smoke from the wreckage could be seen from where I lay.
I stayed put. I was in a good defensive position, what happened next was up to the crowd below.
The sun climbed higher in the sky and on the roof of that old fort, the temperature soared. I was sweating pretty good by then, was exhausted and hungry… Finally I had had enough. I crawled over to one of the cooking chimneys and stood up.
They were going down the road in knots of threes and fours. With the binoculars I counted them. Twenty-eight.
There was no way to know if that was all of them. Crouching, I made my way to the courtyard side, where I could look down in, and listen.
No sound but the wind, which was out of the west at about fifteen knots, a typical desert day this time of year.
After a couple minutes of this, I inched my head over the edge for a look. Three bodies lay sprawled in the courtyard.
I had a fifty-foot rope in the rucksack. I tied one end around a chimney and tossed it over the wall on the side away from the main gate. Then I clambered over.
Safely on the ground, I kept close to the wall, out of sight of the openings above me. On the north side the edge of the ridge was close, about forty yards. I got opposite that point, gripped my rifle with both hands, and ran for it. No shots.
Safely under the ledge, I sat down, caught my breath, and had a drink of water.
If there was anyone still in the fort waiting to ambush me, he could wait until doomsday for all I cared.
I moved downslope and around the ridge about a hundred yards to a place where I could see the runway and the airplanes and the road.
The figures were still distinct in my binoculars, walking briskly.
What would they do when they got to the airplanes? They would find the bodies of three men who died violently and three sabotaged airplanes. Three of the airplanes would appear to be intact.
The possibility that the intact airplanes were sabotaged would of course occur to them. I argued that they would not get in those planes, but would hunker down and wait until some of their friends came looking for them. Of course, the only food and water they had would be in the planes or what they had carried from the fort, but they could comfortably sit tight for a couple of days.
We couldn't. If the Libyan military found us, the Osprey would be MiG-meat and we would be doomed.
A thorough, careful preflight of the bizjets would turn up the bombs, of course. We needed to panic these people, not give them the time to search the jets or find holes to crawl into.
Panic was Julie's job.
She had grinned when I told her how she would have to do it.
I used the binoculars to check the progress of the walking men. They were about a mile away now, approaching the mat where the airplanes were parked. The laggards were hurrying to catch up with the leaders. Apparently no one wanted to take the chance that he might be left behind.
Great outfit, that.
The head of the column had just reached the jets when I heard the Osprey. It was behind me, coming down the ridge.
In seconds it shot over the fort, which was to my left, and dived toward the runway.
Julie was a fine pilot, and the Osprey was an extraordinary machine. She kept the engines horizontal and made a high-speed pass over the bizjets, clearing the tail of the middle one by about fifty feet. I watched the whole show through my binoculars.
She gave the terrorists a good look at the U.S. Marine Corps markings on the plane.
The Osprey went out about a mile and began the transition to rotor-borne flight. I watched it slow, watched the engines tilt up, then watched it drop to just a few feet above the desert.
Julie kept the plane moving forward just fast enough to stay out of the tremendous dust cloud that the rotors kicked up, a speed of about twenty knots, I estimated.
She came slowly down the runway. Through the binoculars I saw the muzzle flashes as she squeezed off a burst from the flex Fifty. I knew she planned to shoot at one of the disabled jets, see if she could set it fire The fuel tanks would still contain fuel vapor and oxygen, so a high-powered bullet in the right place should find something to ignite.