Even though the Goliath was in ground mode, it nonetheless took flight off the narrow platform. The two remaining lifting rotor rings managed to keep the drone from falling straight down. It dropped along a graceful, gentle arc toward the center of the control stations. A slight grin on his lips, Xander Moore — with a steady gaze and sure hand — activated the detonate button on his console.
Abdul-Shahid Almasi reacted quickly when the odd, four-wheel drone crashed through the door of the command center. He was experienced enough with drone warfare to know what was coming next.
Brushing past a stunned General Burkov, Almasi shot through a small side door and dove around a bend in the hallway — just as the explosion filled the command center.
Charlie Fox placed the goggles back on his head, choosing to watch his death arrive through the strange detached perspective from outside.
With no way to defend against forty suicide drones, nearly all of the attacking UAVs hit the metal buildings unimpeded. At sixty miles per hour, even the light mass of the combat drones was enough to puncture the structure. Dozens of rays of light erupted from the dark roofs of the hangars as they were perforated by the crashing drones.
Although the red, white and blue UAVs were heavily damaged from the impact, with their prop-rings and cameras sheared off, Fox knew the ordinance packages would survive — they were designed to survive. He heard the ear-piercing claps as the drones struck the building, and then without delay crashed into the pods and other parts of the buildings’ interior.
With his eyes focused on the outside overhead view seen through his FPV goggles, Charlie Fox waited for the inevitable.
But after a second… and then two, and still no explosion, he pulled off the goggles. He was suddenly in the hangar again, but this time in the middle of a scene of terrible devastation.
Even though none of the drones had exploded, the ballistic nature of their arrival had done a number on the interior of the building. Several of the pods were in tatters, with bodies hanging out of the ones where the drones had made direct contact. Other parts of the huge room were in ruins as well, yet by a quick estimate, over two thirds of the pods had survived. Their shocked and confused occupants were looking about the room, just like Charlie was himself.
Yet Fox wasn’t assessing the damage anymore, he was looking for one person in particular. He climbed out of his pod and stood up, scanning the room. His knees grew weak — not from the shock of tragedy, but rather from relief and joy — when he saw Xander Moore standing next to a pod two rows over. He met Fox’s laughing eyes.
“You sure do like to blow up really expensive drones,” Fox called out as he ran up to Xander and enveloped him in a powerful hug. “Nothing like cutting it close. That has to be the literal definition of the last second!”
“Helps to keep the suspense level up,” Xander replied. Then his smile vanished as he looked around the room. “What about casualties? Any idea?”
“Still too early to tell, but it could have been worse.”
Heat and exhaust shattered the narrow door and flooded his escape route with smoke and fire, scorching his shoes and pant legs, igniting them. He slapped at the burning fabric, strangely oblivious to the pain as his survival instinct took over. Other pieces of burning fabric were scattered around him — the dark green of the Russian general’s service uniform.
On his hands and knees, Almasi crawled down the corridor, further away from the inferno behind him. Vague thoughts of anger and frustration filled his mind, even if the full impact of the explosion hadn’t yet been realized.
He managed to get to his feet and hobble, dragging his injured left leg behind him. He had escape routes already dug, so he knew he could get out of the underground complex and to a non-descript building outside the compound, even in light of the catastrophic failure of his operation.
Almasi’s thoughts became clearer as he moved along the narrow, dirt floor of the escape tunnel. He didn’t need to go back to check; he knew the loss was total. Even if some of the pilots and operators had survived, the sensitive equipment in the room was now damaged beyond repair. Contact was lost, not only with the drones in the compound above, but also in America.
The mission was over. All the missions were over. All that remained was his personal survival.
Chapter 29
At a desk in the master bedroom of his suite at the Armani Hotel in the Burj Kahafia building in Dubai, Jonas Lemon saw the screen on his computer go dark and felt the tense feedback of his control stick vanish. The three men guarding him in the room saw it, too, and they now looked at each other with confusion on their dark faces.
“What happened” Faisal Haddad asked.
“Looks like you’re going to need a new boss,” Jonas answered.
“Almasi’s dead?”
“The control room back in Karachi has just been taken out, and the last I knew, he was in the room. You can draw your own conclusions from that.”
“Fuck you, Lemon!” the man yelled as he pulled out his cellphone and began frantically dialing numbers. The other two men watched with nervous expressions as Faisal dialed and redialed. All he kept getting was a recording saying that the number he was trying to reach was not in service at this time and to try back later.
“I sincerely hope you got paid in advance,” Jonas said after the terrorist gave up trying to reach Almasi.
In a surge of anger, the man stepped forward and placed the barrel of a Berretta 9mm against Jonas’ temple. “I should just kill you now. I’ve wanted to since the first moment we met. What difference would it make now if I did?”
“He has a lot of money, Faisal,” said one of the other men.
Haddad hesitated. “So, Lemon, how much is your life worth?”
“I don’t know… why don’t you ask him?” Jonas nodded toward the door to the bedroom.
The terrorist smiled, not about to fall for the ruse — until he heard the pop-pop of two silenced gunshots. He’d managed a half turn toward the door when a dark hole suddenly appeared in his left temple. A torrent of escaping blood quickly filled the hole, and Faisal Haddad collapsed to the carpet of the plush hotel room.
The gunman entered the room, unscrewing the suppressor muzzle from his Sig-Sauer. “Just the timing of this should warrant another ten thousand dollars,” said the man with the thick French accent.
“I would agree, Francois,” said Jonas Lemon, “except for the fact that it was you who let them take me captive in the first place.”
“The opportunity to free you did not present itself… until now.”
Jonas smiled and looked back at the dark computer screen. “I’ll give you the extra ten thousand — and another fifty grand — if you can locate and isolate Xander Moore for me. Don’t kill him. Just get him ready for me.”
“Seeing that he is far away in America, and under the protection of the U.S. government, that may take some time. You know I do not rush these things.”
Jonas looked around at the three bodies bleeding out on the floor of the bedroom. “No, you don’t, but I must say, your timing is impeccable.”
Jonas Lemon stood up from the desk. “Just do what I ask, Francois. I’ve waited this long for my revenge. I can wait a little longer.”