“We’re en route,” snapped the Delta commander. He patched in the pilots as Breanna had Chris sketch the base and approach.
“We’ll take out the Zeus as you come in,” Breanna said. “The hangar with the aircraft will be three thousand meters beyond it, close to the water.”
“We’ll hit it, take out the plane, and look for our guys.”
“Roger that.”
“ETA five minutes,” said the lead pilot. The two Ospreys were rushing through the mountain passes, heading for their target. “We’re going silent com.”
“Fort Two,” acknowledged Bree. She turned toward her copilot. “Hold one missile in reserve for the hangar if they can’t reach it.”
“Yeah. That’s what I was thinking.” Chris nodded, then sighed so loud her earphones practically shattered. He sounded like a horse that had just lost its chance to run in the Derby. “Listen, I’m sorry about that emotion thing I said. I didn’t mean it.”
“We’re both tired,” she said, worried that his crack had been all too true.
Northern Somalia
23 October, 0445
THE OSPREY WHEELED OUT OF THE HILLS JUST AS THE big antiaircraft gun at the edge of the base exploded. Skipping forward, the MHV-22 plopped herself down a few feet from the DC-8 at the edge of the ramp. Danny jumped from the rear of the plane behind Powder, and saw two figures running toward him; he pushed the trigger on his sub-submachine gun and the men crumpled immediately.
“Fuel truck! Fuel truck!” Liu yelled behind him. Danny saw the tanker under the airliner’s wing. Bison had thrown himself in a crouch, aiming his SAW grenade launcher at the easy target.
“Don’t blow it! Don’t blow it!” Freah yelled. They were tasked with searching the plane before destroying it, in case the pilots and Marines were aboard already.
“Somebody in the cockpit!” shouted Hernandez.
Gunfire erupted to his right, a short burst of automatic fire. Danny threw himself down as a flare ignited overhead. He heard the rumble of a heavy machine gun at the far end, saw the silhouette of an Osprey, the other Osprey, descending near the hangar.
There was a boarding ladder near the fuselage of the DC-8 less than twenty yards away. The door was open and there didn’t appear to be any soldiers or guards between them and the aircraft.
“On the plane! On the plane!” screamed Danny, jumping to his feet. Talcom and Hernandez were already at the ladder cart, exchanging gunfire with someone at the top. “Use the concussion grenades!” he shouted as he ran. “Knock them out! Don’t hurt our guys!”
His men didn’t need to be reminded of such basic procedures, but Danny yelled them anyway. Talcom and Hernandez had managed to get inside the plane in the few seconds it took for him to reach the ladder. He took the rungs two at a time, a concussion grenade in his hand. He slipped his thumbnail beneath the tape, ready to toss it in.
“We’re clean! We’re clean!” Talcom was yelling. “Somebody’s in the cockpit!”
Danny threw himself into the airliner, rolling on the rubber-matted floor. The plane shook with a nearby explosion. Something burned on the other side of the base, faint red flickers mixing with the predawn twilight. Danny pulled out his small penlike flashlight, playing its narrow tungsten-lit beam carefully across the interior. The airliner was configured as a bare-bones passenger transport with fifteen or sixteen rows of seats between the boarding door and the flight deck. Talcom and Hernandez were huddled near the cockpit, their heads next to the closed door, listening to see what was happening on the other side. Freah spun around, checking the rear of the plane. There were maybe another dozen rows of seats back to a curtain. He got to his feet and ran back, ducking into the last row of seats.
He took the concussion grenade from his pocket, held it up so the others could see.
Talcom gave him a thumbs-up. Freah pulled the pin and rolled the grenade under the curtain. In the next moment his men at the front fired off the lock on the cockpit door. Danny waited for the boom of the grenades, then dove up and over the seats, rolling into the galley.
No one was there. A cargo compartment lay beyond the galley. He tried the door, found it locked. He stood back, fired at the recessed handle. It still wouldn’t budge. He threw himself against it, his flashlight slipping from his hand and clanking so loudly against the counter that for a split second he thought it was a gunfire.
“Captain! Captain!” yelled Hernandez.
Danny spun back to see a dazed man with vaguely Middle Eastern features being herded down the aisle by his two sergeants.
“Guy’s the pilot. They were just ready to take off, I think,” said Hernandez. “Head’s scrambled or maybe I just can’t understand what the hell he’s saying.”
“APC coming up from the other end of the base,” added Talcom. “Egg’s holding him off.”
Freah grabbed the pilot. “Where are our men?”
The man shook his head as if he didn’t understand. Freah tightened his grip and pushed him against the seat. “My people!” he demanded.
The man said something unintelligible.
“Captain, our grenade probably beat shit out of his eardrums,” said Powder. “Even if he understands English, he probably can’t hear. Sucker’s lucky he wasn’t killed.” The plane rocked with a fresh explosion.
“That APC’s going to nail us, whether they’re aiming to or not,” yelled Hernandez from the doorway.
A moment later the front of the plane exploded.
Northern Somalia
23 October, 0445
THE FOUR-BARRELED ZSU-23 VAPORIZED AS THE warhead of the JSOW exploded. Flames lit the night as Breanna continued through her orbit, one eye on the blank RWR screen.
“Vector aircraft are in. They’re at the hangar and on the airliner,” said Chris, who was monitoring the radio transmissions as well as scanning the site with the infrared. “Vehicles back near the terminal building.”
“Patrol boat?”
“I have it designated. We can take it out at will. Machine-gun fire on the north side of the base. I think they’re shooting at us. No SAMs. No radar.”
Breanna continued around, edging the Megafortress over the water. They were within the lethal envelope of a shoulder-fired missile like a Stinger or the SA-16, the Russian equivalent; she had to be ready to pull evasive maneuvers at any second. Still, she found her thoughts wandering, drifting down to the assault teams, wondering if they had found Mack.
Why did she care? Why had Jeff accused her of having an affair with him?
“Bree?”
“Take it out,” she snapped, her unconscious alerting her to the fact that the patrol boat had snapped on a scanning radar. Her hands were already prodding the Megafortress away.
“Missile away,” said Chris. “Scope is now clean.”
The boat had turned off its radar, but nonetheless began firing its weapon, a large-bore cannon. The air below them crackled and popped with the explosions.
Suddenly it smoothed out and the horizon glowed. “Got the motherfucker,” said Chris. “Big fucking burn. Go baby, go baby.”
“Good one.” Breanna checked her warning screens, making sure Fort Two hadn’t been hit. They were clean, systems in the green.
“APCs launching an attack,” said Chris, back on the FLIR.
“Can you take them out?”
“I can get one, if you can spin us back so I can get a better look. After that, we’re down to our last missile. You still want to save it?”
“Yeah,” she said, beginning the bank.
“APC near the hangar or the airliner?”
“Hangar,” said Breanna.
“Here’s something for you to take home to the Ayatollah,” said Chris as he pickled the missile off.
Breanna’s laugh was interrupted by the RWR buzzer. The two MiG-29’s they’d scared off earlier were on their way back.
Northern Somalia