“Got them?”
Hansen held up a hand, shook his head. Alan looked again at the warehouse, saw a silhouetted head, aimed more carefully, and fired. Hadn’t there been some famous pistol shooter who enjoyed shooting at gallon jugs at a hundred yards? Oh, yeah. Do better throwing wads of Kleenex.
“They won’t talk to me,” Hansen said behind him. His young face was red with anger. He held out the phone. “They’re asking me for ID.”
Alan grabbed the phone. “They still there?” He slammed the cell phone against his ear. “Hello! Now listen up. This is Lieutenant-Commander Alan Craik, U.S. Navy.” He rattled off his service number. “I’m under fire and I need help and who the hell are you?”
“Uh — sir, this is Special Agent Gollub, NCIS Washington. Uh, sir—”
“Goddamit, Gollub, don’t dick with me! I’m on a ship that’s been hit by an explosion, people are shooting at us, and I’ve got one goddamn pistol! Get me some fucking help!”
“Sir, we’re the Navy’s investigative serv—”
“Then fucking investigate! I want the contact info for the Kenyan naval facility, Mombasa, Kenya. Right now! Do it!”
“Uh, sir, your language is not—”
“Do you know Mike Dukas?”
“Uh, yessir, I know Special Agent Dukas by sight and repu—”
“Well, if you don’t find me that information right now, I am personally going to have him tear your fucking throat out, because he is my asshole buddy! You follow?” He put his eye to the gap in the steel plates, saw the head again, and fired. “Did you follow me, Mister Gollub? Hello? Gollub? Goddamit—!”
“You want the Kenyan Naval Maritime Patrol Center, Kilindini, Kenya. The telephone is 596–987. They communicate on the following frequencies: a hundred and—”
“Don’t tell me; tell this guy.” Alan handed the phone to Hansen. “Get the phone number; screw the frequencies.”
He looked through the gap again, saw the head, fired three shots. There! Bang-bang-bang — body, body, head! Right? No, missed with every one.
Gallon jugs at a hundred yards. Jesus! “Where’s that guy with the sniper rifle?” He tipped his head back, looked up the side of the superstructure. “Hey! Yo!” What the hell was his name? Jagiello! “Jagiello, what the hell are you doing?”
He scuttled into the comm shack after Hansen. “You get the number?”
“That guy said he was going to report you.”
“Right, I’m really worried about that. Did you get the number?”
“Yessir. What you want me to say?”
“You say that Lieutenant-Commander Craik, U.S. Navy, is asking—asking—for their support and cooperation. He is under fire on USNS Harker, hit by an explosion thirty minutes ago. We are in a hot zone — use those words, ‘hot zone.’ They got a problem, give me the—”
Both men lifted their heads as the unmistakable sound of a rocket engine whooshed closer. Hansen’s eyes were wide. “Hit the deck!” Alan shouted, but the missile was already by them, the sound decreasing, and then there was an explosion.
“Sir, sir—!” It was Patel, the lookout on the bridge. He came scrambling down the catwalk, half-fell into the room, still on all fours. “Sir, they are shooting missiles at the fireboat! Now it is on fire!”
Rose Siciliano Craik was accustomed to waking with first light. Mike Dukas’s call had come a little earlier than that, but now, fifteen minutes later, she was up and moving quickly through the habitual motions of the morning. Brush teeth, shower, turn on television; dress in T-shirt and jeans and slippers, make coffee, watch the clip on CNN, check e-mails, feed the dog, check the kids (both still sleeping), drink coffee. Try not to think about where her husband was. Make lunches while standing at the kitchen counter, a book of engineering drawings of the space shuttle open in front of her, because she was beginning astronaut training.
Try not to think about her husband.
Try not to think about her mother.
Her father had called her last night. Her mother, he said, had “gone funny.” It had taken her a while to get him to explain what he meant. Her mother was forgetting things. Had been, he confessed, for some time. I didn’t want to worry you.
Thinking, when she wasn’t thinking about her mother, of that three-fingered hand coming up on the television screen, knowing how much the wound dismayed him. A proud man, perhaps vain, hating disfigurement; former wrestler, too aware now of holds he couldn’t make. Stupid little things really throw us, she thought. Poor guy. His first lovemaking had been awkward, hiding the hand. At dinner, he had kept it in his lap.
Her mother had got lost walking to the store, her father had said. She had been walking the route for twenty years. She worried that black people were coming into her house. He had found her nailing the windows shut.
Rose wrapped the lunches, hers and Mikey’s and the baby’s for day care. She flipped from channel to channel, looking for more news. Most of them had the story now, but CNN had the most, the best. Still, there wasn’t enough to know what was going on.
She worried. He could be dying. Dead.
She worried about him because he was a risk-taker, impetuous. A glory hound, some Navy people said. No. More like a poet with balls of steel — idealist, hard case.
She had a tough day ahead. Two hours in the astronauts’ gym for VO2-Max and heart tests; an hour underwater in mock zero gravity; two hours hands-on on the engineering of the shuttle. Plus, just thrown at her by Mike Dukas, an obligatory half hour with NASA security to plan protection for her and the kids.
“For what!” she’d protested. “What am I being protected from, for God’s sake?”
Mike knew her temper and wasn’t fazed by it. Mike was in love with her, but he wasn’t afraid of her. “From whoever blew up that ship, babe. Listen to me! The family of every man on that ship is going to get the same message today — maximum alert, get security, protect yourself! It’s Uncle’s standard OP when there’s terrorism.”
“But why me? Mike, I’m up to my ass in work as it is!”
“Because your husband’s on the ship now and because he put his face on TV for every goddamn terrorist in the world to see. Babe! Trust me!”
“Oh, yeah.” She had pretended to argue, but she saw the point. If not for her, then for the kids. Dukas was to get on to NASA security as soon as he had hung up from talking to her; she was to warn Mikey’s camp and Bobby’s day care.
She wasn’t afraid for herself. But she’d kill to protect her children.
Reminded, she went back into the bedroom and slid open the drawer on her side. There, in a locked metal box, was her armpit gun, a Smith & Wesson Model 15. A revolver. Some guys had laughed at her for picking a revolver. But she liked the feel of it and the no-bullshit simplicity of it, and she liked the .38 Special plus-Ps that she shot in it. “Not a lady’s gun,” the fat man in the gun shop had said to her when she bought it, and she had said, “I’m not a lady.”
She aimed it at a spot on the wall. The sights lined up as if they had been programmed. She dry-fired every day, hit a range at least once a week, shot fifty-yard combat courses for fun.