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“Steady on …” Barnes said to himself as he prepared to squeeze the firing button.

That was the last thought “Pistol” Pete Barnes would ever have. The Russian gunner in the lead Havoc had placed his second SA-14 missile into the inlet particle deflector of the S-70’s right engine.

The ensuing explosion decapitated both pilots, sending the Sikorsky Night Hawk out of control. The spinning helicopter plunged straight down, plowing into the ground in a thunderous fireball.

Steve Lincoln watched in total disbelief as Scarecrow Two exploded on impact. “Captain Barnes went in, sir,” Lincoln shouted into the intercom.

“I know,” Buchanan replied, straining to see through the snow shower they had encountered.

Dimitri, shivering uncontrollably, crawled next to Wickham, who was breathing in shallow, quick gasps. The senior CIA agent was lying in a pool of his own blood.

“We’re on our way out,” Dimitri said to Wickham. “You’ll be okay as soon as we—”

“Dimitri,” Wickham interrupted, “tell the pilot … to get your … message out. Top priority …”

“Okay,” Dimitri responded quietly, covering the agent with a thin medical blanket.

“What’d he say?” Lincoln asked, glancing back and forth between the cabin and the pursuing gunships.

“The pilot … can he send a m-message? An important message to the — to Washington?” Dimitri asked, shivering violently in the cold cabin.

“Yeah,” Lincoln replied, glancing back to the Soviet helicopters. “But now ain’t a good time. Wait ’til we shake these guys, then I’ll ask.”

“Okay,” Dimitri responded, then looked at Wickham. The young agent was stunned by what he saw. Wickham looked dead. His eyes, still open, had rolled back almost out of sight.

“No!” Dimitri cried, wringing his hands, totally devastated. “Oh, no …”

The agent, tears rolling down his cheeks, slowly pulled the blood-soaked blanket up over Wickham, covering his head.

Dimitri, in the dark cabin and shivering with shock, couldn’t see that his friend, Steve Wickham, had only passed out but was still breathing.

“You might as well cover the gunny, too,” the rescued copilot said as he struggled to enter the cockpit. “He died a couple of minutes ago.”

Suddenly, two bright streaks raced past the Night Hawk, lighting the interior.

“Christ,” Buchanan shouted, popping off containers of metallic chaff. “Here come the missiles.”

“Use some help?” the copilot of Scarecrow Three asked, climbing into the vacant seat.

“Damn right!” Buchanan answered, noticing the trickle of blood on the pilot’s arm. “You okay?”

“Think so,” the former Marine first lieutenant replied. “Nothing too serious.”

Two, three, then four more streaks of light went flashing by the racing Night Hawk. A fifth missile tracked into a burst of decoy chaff, exploding fifty yards behind the Sikorsky.

“Line,” Buchanan shouted, “can you get a shot, any shot, at those bastards?”

“I think so, sir,” Lincoln replied, leaning out his side door as far as he dared without a restraint.

CRACK!!

The S-70 slewed sideways, then righted itself as Buchanan frantically scanned the engine gauges.

“We’ve been hit,” Lincoln groaned as he fell backwards, stumbling over the body of Blackie Oaks.

Dimitri could see that Lincoln was bleeding profusely from chest and head injuries. The paramedic had taken a good deal of the impact explosion from the Russian missile.

“Get back there and see what we have,” Buchanan ordered the copilot, then glanced at the blinking radar altimeter. “Goddamn!” Buchanan quietly admonished himself. “Pay attention, you stupid shit.”

THE KREMLIN

Two kitchen-staff servers gingerly placed large platters of zakuska on Zhilinkhov’s dining table, then hastily exited the room. The brutal interrogations by the KGB had left deep psychological scars on the servants.

“Come, comrades,” Zhilinkhov said to his ill-at-ease friends. “Let us enjoy these fine delicacies.”

The general secretary motioned for the men to take a seat, then half-fell into his large chair at the head of the massive wood table.

“Viktor Pavlovich,” Dichenkovko, his oldest friend, said softly, “we need to talk with you about this plan.”

Tension hung in the air, pressing from every corner like walls converging on the individuals present in the dining room.

“What do you — wish to talk about?” Zhilinkhov stopped smiling, squinting menacingly. “You do not like — you do not have the stomach for — this plan? For world dominance?”

Deadly silence filled the room, making it very uncomfortable for Dichenkovko and the other members. They knew their friend and leader had changed drastically in a short period of time. The five men were frightened, frightened for themselves and the future of the Soviet Union.

“Well,” Zhilinkhov said loudly, banging both fists on the table. He growled again, “Say what you mean.”

Aleksandr Pulaev cleared his throat. “We think now is not the opportune time to attack the Americans. Their allies will counterattack us, too. We have aroused a sleeping giant, along with his friends. We must allow time for a return to normal.”

“Left to you, my friend,” Zhilinkhov smiled crookedly, “there would never be an opportune time!”

“Viktor Pavlovich,” Dichenkovko intervened, “let us discuss this matter when we are refreshed and have a better assessment of the—”

“We will discuss the matter now,” Zhilinkhov said heatedly, then downed his vodka. “You surprise me, my trusted friend. All of you. Look where … what I have accomplished. I am on the brink of … of global conquest. …”

Zhilinkhov suddenly stopped, rising from his chair, tumbler in hand, to fix another drink.

“Now you tell me you have no stomach, no desire to fulfill our destiny, our commitment to the Party,” Zhilinkhov said as he turned around from the portable serving bar and waited for an answer.

“No, Viktor Pavlovich,” Yevstigneyev, the Politburo member responsible for party discipline, explained, “we believe, like you, in the Party, our goals for the Motherland, our sense of respon—”

Without warning, an aide urgently rapped on the door and stepped into the room.

Zhilinkhov, surprised, knocked his drink into the sunken ice container, then turned around in a rage.

“Damnit, Colonel, what is it?” Zhilinkhov yelled, causing the senior officer to flinch.

“General Secretary,” the colonel pursed his lips, “the spies have escaped.”

Zhilinkhov turned crimson, then hurled his tumbler at the wall, shattering glass across the room.

“OUT,” Zhilinkhov bellowed, enraged. “Get out! Get me Air Marshal Khatchadovrian — NOW!”

The colonel, eyes wide in terror, backed toward the open door, barking orders to a subordinate.

The “Inner Circle” members were stunned and frightened by the behavior of their general secretary. He was clearly out of control.

Zhilinkhov turned toward his fellow conspirators, talking softly at first. “General Vranesevic is … he is dead,” Zhilinkhov yelled, then clutched his chest and staggered to the couch.

“Call the doctor!” Yegoery Yevstigneyev shouted to the colonel as he was closing the door. The senior Politburo member then went to the aid of his stricken friend, the general secretary of the Soviet Communist party.

Chapter Seventeen

SCARECROW ONE

Buchanan, half-turned in his seat, yelled to his new copilot. “What’s the damage?”

“The right gear. The missile took out the right gear and damaged the fuselage,” the young pilot answered, trying to help the wounded paramedic.