"They're going to trigger a meltdown. They're draining the reactor coolant. When they're ready, they'll pull the control rods for the final step."
"The hostages. What about the hostages? What are they going to do with them? Do you have any idea?"
"I heard Glinkov talking. I think he said they're going to be put in the building with the reactor. Something about the radiation helping them out."
"The containment building," Stevens said. "The radiation level is already up in there. That's where that steam came from. If he uncovers the core of that reactor, the radiation will kill anybody inside. And when the fuel burns, that place will be so hot, nobody will be able to get in there for years."
"That's just what the bastard wants," Bolan said.
"Enough time to cover his ass. And a shutdown of all the nuke plants in the country."
"How many men, Eli? How many left?"
"Twelve, I think."
"And where the hell is Parsons? And Achison?"
"I saw Parsons a couple of hours ago," Rachel said. "I don't know where he is now. Or even if he's still alive. Achison is supposed to bring a chopper in for Glinkov's getaway."
Andrey Glinkov watched the dials. The needle on the containment building radiation level was still rising. At ten thousand rems it would be time to move the hostages. The television monitors flickered as they jumped from one image to another. In the bottom of the cooling tower, he could see the water slowly rising. It was highly radioactive waste water leaking from the reactor pressure container. As the core heated, seals and joints on the coolant conduit system began to give, spilling waste water indiscriminately. Radioactive hydrogen was beginning to accumulate at the top of the cooling tower.
The gas was generated by the breakup of the remaining coolant water. An errant spark would detonate the explosive gas. Unless the volume was large, the four-foot-thick concrete walls of the containment building should be equal to the task.
Pressure valves released the gas, together with radioactive steam, whenever the pressure grew too great. Already the runaway reactor had begun to leak deadly gas into the atmosphere around the plant. In the cold air, the radioactive steam condensed in small, deadly clouds for a few moments. Then, borne on a stiff winter wind, it vanished into thin air to become a slowly drifting invisible killing zone.
The temperature gauge was most interesting. It was slowly climbing as the coolant drained away, rushing into the complex of concrete tunnels that honeycombed the earth under the plant. It was already nearly six hundred degrees in the containment building, and the core was hotter still. Glinkov was still unaware of Robbins's ploy. With the evacuation pump out of action, the water was running off at a slower rate than was possible. And the tunnel exits were still sealed.
From time to time, the Russian glanced at the security monitors, but his hands were full. He had no time to watch what was going on in the bowels of the plant. Had he been more alert, he might have seen three men and a woman move past one of the cameras on Level 4.
Had he been more attentive still, he might have seen another shadowy figure as well. This one moved with less urgency, seeming almost lost in its tentative wandering through the maze of underground corridors. He hadn't heard from the hit team waiting for Eli Cohen. It was taking a long time.
On the other hand, perhaps Cohen had simply taken as long to get below as he had to check the plant perimeter. Death is patient, Glinkov knew.
Cohen's time would come soon enough. And that would leave one final victim.
Mack Bolan.
Surely he wouldn't fail to show. Everything in his KGB files said that he would. A man who dared to chew at the Soviet beast from its very heart as Bolan had done in Moscow itself, wouldn't balk at the opportunity so carefully and generously extended to him here.
By his own estimate, Glinkov had less than an hour. Achison would be arriving in fifty minutes. By then he would have completed his sabotage of the reactor. The hostages would long since have been sealed in the containment building, to be found God knows when, but certainly long after their discovery would be a threat to him. That left only the assault team itself to deal with.
They, too, were expendable. Their work finished, some of their number would turn on the others. They would be eliminated quickly and painlessly. He and Achison would finish the job from the chopper.
Years later, with little left but radioactive bones, no one would care how they had died. They would be written off as victims of the tragic accident of Thunder Mountain — if anyone still cared.
It was time to check on the hostages.
Glinkov gestured to the sentry posted outside the backup control room. "How are our guests, Warren? Resting comfortably, I trust?"
Warren smiled before answering. "Hell, yes. They don't have a care in the world."
"It will be time to move them very shortly. You had better get the rest of the team. We'll need them for the last part of our operation."
"Where to?"
"On Level 4. There's a double-airlock entrance to the reactor containment building down there."
"What about Cohen?"
"Don't worry about him."
"Bobby taking care of him?"
Glinkov nodded.
"Too bad. I wanted to waste him myself," Warren said. "That bastard was getting way too big for his boots."
"I shouldn't wonder," Glinkov said. "Mossad agents are not known for their modesty."
"Mossad! Are you kidding?"
"Most assuredly not."
"Why'd you wait so long to ice him?"
"He was useful. A man should never lose an opportunity to let an opponent do his work for him. It is most efficient. Even Moscow Center is budget conscious these days. Tools are everywhere, Warren. But it takes a craftsman to recognize them. And an artist to make the most of them."
"Yeah," Warren said, laughing. "I guess you could teach a course on that subject."
"Perhaps I will, Warren. Perhaps I will. Even you might learn something."
"I'll bet," Warren said.
Glinkov just smiled.
27
Fortunately Rachel was resilient.
She had already regained her energy and now toted an AK-47 taken from one of her captors.
"We're going to have a real problem upstairs," she said. Her voice betrayed no emotion. Bolan knew it was partly self-control and partly realism.
"What's the situation up there?" he asked.
"If they haven't moved anyone, all the hostages are in the secondary control room. I don't know how Glinkov has his team deployed. But I do know there's only one way into that room."
"Are there guards in with them?"
"There was one on the door. That's all I saw."
Bolan turned to Matt Stevens. "Is there any way we can get to the main control room without being spotted, Matt?"
"Depends on where they are. We can get close, but unless the door is opened from inside, there's only one way in."
"How?" Bolan's voice cracked sharply. The concrete walls echoed as if it was a pistol shot.
Stevens reached into his pocket and withdrew a flat plastic security pass. About the size of a credit card, it was magnetically coded. There was a lock on each of the doors. The card would permit him to open them one at a time. "The problem is, this can be overridden. If Glinkov spots me, we're out of luck."