Lyons sat at the helicopter's left side door. He had taken the twenty-inch barrel from the bullet-smashed Atchisson and replaced the short barrel of his own Atchisson. With his weapon loaded with a magazine of one-ounce armor-piercing slugs, he waited.
Blancanales sat at the right side door with his M-16/M-203 over-and-under assault rifle-grenade launcher. He had loaded the grenade launcher with a high-explosive 40mm shell. A bandolier of high-explosive and phosphorous grenades crossed his black Kevlar-and-steel battle armor.
Gadgets stayed in the center, where he could pass ammunition and weapons to either side and also man the scrambled radio to the truck carrying the drugs. With the radio's power on, he, too, waited.
"Hit the lights," Lyons said into the intercom.
The pilot switched on the helicopter's xenon spotlight. Sudden noon illuminated the two-lane road. Exactly as the DEA report had described, Able Team saw a white Dodge leading the truck. A pickup truck followed.
"Tell the follow cars to fall back," Lyons said next.
Breaking in on the radio frequency of the cars that trailed the drug convoy, the pilot advised the officers of the interception. Lyons looked back. Far behind, he saw a set of headlights pull to the side of the road.
"Wizard… tell the scum what's happening."
Gadgets flipped up the transmit switch. "You in the truck. Stop. We are prepared to destroy if you continue. Stop or die."
He flicked off the transmit. As he waited for an answer, he called out to his partners, "Is that straight talk? Did I tell them?"
An electronically resynthesized voice answered. "Whoever you are, you are interfering in the operations of the United States government. You are hereby directed to desist from your pursuit and communication, under penalty of law."
"You got identification?" Gadgets asked.
"If we must present identification, we will arrest you."
"How do I know I'm not talking to a wetback with a Harvard accent?"
Lyons and Blancanales laughed at Gadgets's jive. Then slugs hammered the underside of the Huey. The pilot wrenched the controls to the side.
The sudden banking threw Lyons against his safety harness. Hanging against the straps, he saw the lights of Tijuana and San Diego fall away. The turquoise of the eastern horizon appeared as the pilot righted the troopship. Gadgets's voice came on the intercom. "There's the answer. War."
Lyons spoke into the intercom. "Pilot, take us in on their right side. Quick flyby."
"What do you intend to do, sir?"
"Stop them."
"They fired at us. I don't know if I'm authorized to risk any further damage to National Guard equipment..."
"Pilot," Lyons interrupted with a question. "Were you trained for combat?"
"Yes, sir."
"Well, here it is. Take us in."
"You've got the authorization?"
"Most definitely," Blancanales answered. "You got the message from Washington, correct?"
"Stop the talk!" Lyons shouted. "Take us in!"
"But, sir, you want me to attack civilian vehicles?"
"Flyboy, if you don't want to do it, get out..."
Banking again, the Huey swept down on the road. At a hundred ten miles an hour, the chopper gained on the speeding vehicles. Muzzle-flash sparked from the back window of the pickup.
As Lyons sighted on the pickup, the helicopter leaped in altitude, climbing to two hundred feet. Lyons yelled into his intercom, "What is your problem?"
"I'm sorry, sir. But my superiors will prosecute me."
Lyons turned to Gadgets. "Put a pistol to the back of his head." As Gadgets went forward with his Beretta 93-R in his hand, Lyons spoke again to the pilot.
"You are now at pistol point, pilot. Your superiors can't hold you responsible for your actions."
A laugh answered. "Yes, sir. I'm no longer responsible. You should have taken me hostage sooner. Here we go."
The helicopter dropped. It skimmed the desert brush. Lyons sighted on the pickup. A shadow inside pointed a rifle out the side window.
Lyons put a slug through the passenger door The truck veered across the road, then swerved straight. Lyons hit the cab again. The driver stomped on the brakes, the pickup skidding sideways. Lyons pivoted in his seat to fire once more, but the helicopter left the truck far behind.
Autofire flashed from the white Dodge sedan. Slugs slammed the aluminum of the Huey. Lyons saw rifles firing from the passenger window. He sighted on the car and fired one slug, then another. The rifle fire stopped. He spoke into the intercom. "Pilot, other side of the road. Politician, high explosive into the truck's cab."
"Cargo truck or pickup?" asked Blancanales as the helicopter gained altitude.
"Pickup."
A streak of fire flashed past the helicopter. The pilot threw the Huey into a violent turn. Leaning against his safety harness, Lyons looked back.
The pickup truck accelerated to close the distance with the cargo truck. In the graying light, he saw a form in the back of the pickup.
Lyons spoke to Blancanales through the intercom. "A man in back's got a rocket launcher. Hit him, Pol. Pilot, take us in."
"Against rockets?" the pilot protested.
"Think of this as advanced combat training. No grades, no scores. Just pass or fail."
The pilot took the helicopter in again, this time on the left-hand side of the road. As an evasive maneuver, he bounced the troopship, rising and falling in altitude from two hundred feet to fifty feet. Blancanales struggled to aim his grenade launcher at the pickup.
The two-velocity 40mm grenade went far beyond the vehicle and exploded in the desert.
As Blancanales reloaded, Lyons screamed into the intercom, "Quit the yo-yo routine!"
"But..."
"But nothing. Take it in and hold it so my partner can make his shot."
"There's another helicopter!"
"What?" Lyons leaned far out from the side door to look back. A helicopter approached, flying at head height across the desert. It cut over the road, then banked. Lyons leaned across the Huey to look through the opposite side door.
The border patrol helicopter closed on the convoy of trucks and passenger car. Lyons shouted into the intercom, "Who's in that helicopter? Tell them the shits have a rocket launcher!"
"It's your partner, that knock-out looker..."
"Patch me through to her..."
The intercom line buzzed with static, then Lyons heard Flor's voice cursing him. "You macho son of a bitch, who the fuck you think you are to push me out of my operation? Channel is closed!"
The frequency went dead. Lyons shouted again, "Tell them about the rocket..."
As the helicopter neared the pickup truck, an autorifle flashing from the side door, the rocket launcher shot flame.
The launchflash lighted the helicopter. In a frozen instant, in the milliseconds before the RPG hit its target, Lyons saw Flor leaning from the helicopter, a rifle in her hands. Then, at an altitude of ten feet above the sand, the helicopter exploded. It hit the sand and disintegrated in a maelstrom of flame and twisting metal.
"Oh, Flor…" Lyons gasped. He unsnapped his safety harness and scrambled across the Huey, the Atchisson in his hand clattering on the aluminum floor.
In the opposite door, Blancanales beside him, he looked back to see a column of sooty flame rising from the desert. As their speed took them away from the crash, Lyons leaned farther from the side, hoping the impossible, hoping to see Flor run from the mass of fire and junk metal.