"Wait for the trolley, or go across?" asked Boston.
Danny looked at his watch. The trolleys, modern two-car trains, passed every twenty minutes or so.
"It's time for us to call," he told Sorina.
"Only from the station," she insisted.
"Let's walk across the bridge," he said.
He took Sorina's arm, steering her around a cement toadstool placed to prevent cars from going up on the sidewalk. During the day, both sides of the bridge would be crowded with fishermen, even during the winter months. At night, though, the entire bridge was relatively empty. A few tourists and a pair of aging lovers stared out at the water from the rails.
Danny hurried along, trying to remember the layout of the streets on the opposite shore. The train station was to their left, a few blocks from the ferries. They could walk, but it would be faster with a cab.
Taxis tended to congregate near the foot of the bridge, where there was a tram stop as well as nearby ferry stations and a large mosque. He saw a short line of taxis across the way, but to get there they'd have to cross a solid wall of cars zooming along the highway.
A sign indicated an underground passage near the end of the bridge.
"This way," he said, pointing left and nudging Sorina with him.
The stairs opened into a tunnel lined by shops. The walkway itself had been turned into a bazaar. Dealers hawked a variety of wares from blankets. Everything from baseball caps to 1970s vintage television sets was on sale.
A knot of people appeared before them. Suddenly, Danny found himself in the middle of the swarm, unable to move.
Sorina Viorica slipped from his grasp. Danny edged to the left, following her, but a river of people were descending a set of stairs nearby and the crush separated them. She turned to the left, heading up the stairs; he pushed his way through, momentarily losing her. He became more forceful, shoving to make sure he could get through.
Sorina ran up the stairs. Danny followed, barely able to see her. An elderly woman spun a few steps above him, tumbling into him. He pushed her aside as gently as he could manage, struggling upward.
Sorina was gone.
Danny cursed to himself. He reached the open air and took a step, ready to bolt as soon as he spotted her.
She was sitting on her haunches, leaning against the cement wall of the entrance to his right, breathing hard.
"I can't take it," she said, looking up at him. "So many people."
"Cap?" said Boston, coming up behind him. "Make the call," said Danny, holding the phone out to her. "Go ahead."
Her face was pale, her lips thin. But she shook her head. "The station," she insisted. "Here's a taxi!" yelled Boston.
Everyone in the helicopter stared at Stoner, waiting. They were hovering near the border, waiting to proceed.
"Where are our targets?" asked Colonel Brasov.
"I'll find out in a minute," Stoner told him.
"You said that fifteen minutes ago. I have no time for these games."
Stoner didn't reply. There was no sense saying anything until he heard from Sorina.
The colonel turned around to one of his men and began speaking in loud, fast Romanian. Stoner caught a few words, including an expression he'd been told never to use because of its vulgarity.
Had she played him? Or did she simply have second thoughts?
He hoped it was the latter. He didn't like to think he could be fooled.
But everybody could be fooled. Everybody. The sat phone rang.
Stoner continued to stare out the front of the helicopter's windscreen for another second, then reached for the phone.
"I'msorry we're so late," Danny told Stoner when he answered the phone. "It's all right."
Two trains were coming in, pulling head first into the platform. Danny stepped forward, watching Sorina punch the buttons on the automated ticket machine. She'd already bought four tickets; she was trying to make it hard for them to trace her.
"He's on the line." Danny held the phone out to her. Sorina shook her head and reached into her pocket for a piece of paper.
"You tell me now," said Danny. She gave him the paper.
He took a step toward the light and opened it. They were GPS coordinates in Moldova.
"Stoner, plug these coordinates into your GPS," said Danny.
Danny read them off. Sorina stood at the machine, buying even more tickets.
A few yards away, Boston eyed the station warily. There were about a dozen people on the platform, young people mostly, going or coming from a night out; it was impossible to say. Two women in traditional Muslim dresses, long scarves covering their heads, stood together near a small patch of bushes where the trains would stop.
Sorina looked down at her tickets, shuffling through them.
"All right, Captain, we have them," said Stoner. "You can let her go."
Danny held the phone out toward her.
"You want to say good-bye?" he asked.
She hesitated for just a second before shaking her head.
And with that she turned and ran to the nearby train, reaching it just as the door slapped shut to keep her out. She drew back; the doors opened again and she slipped in. Danny watched it pull from the station.
"Hey, Cap, you know what's strange?" asked Boston.
"What's that?" said Danny, without turning around.
"Clock has different times on each side," said Boston. He pointed to the large disk just overhead. "You'd think they could synchronize it."
"Yeah," said Danny, not paying attention as he watched the train disappear around the curve.
Stoner checked the coordinates against the map and satellite photos. The camp to the north was a small farm with a single large barn, an outbuilding, and a few small cottages nearby. Three-quarters of the boundary was formed by a ragged, meandering creek. The last side of the property was marked by a road that ran along the base of a long rift in the hills. The high spot provided a good area for the main landing; a field about a half mile away would allow a smaller group to land and circle around the rear of the property. The trucks, which had already crossed the border and were nearly thirty miles into Moldova, would arrive roughly ten minutes after the helicopters touched down.
The second target was a church and related buildings in the middle of a small town. A single main street zigged through the hamlet, ducking and weaving around a quartet of gentle hills. An orchard of small trees and an open field sat to one side of the church; a row of houses were on the other. A cemetery spread out behind the church. The easiest landing here would be in the field near the orchard; the geography would make it difficult to surround the building before beginning an attack. The trucks would take another twenty minutes to reach the church; they'd be reinforcements only.
The fact that the target was a church bothered Colonel Brasov a great deal.
"This will be a propaganda coup if you are wrong," he told Stoner.
"Yes."
"And if you are right, it is a great sacrilege." Stoner nodded.
"You will be with me in this group," the colonel told him. "Our helicopter will be the first down."
"Right."
Again Stoner wondered if it was a setup, if he'd been fooled. Perhaps the charges had been set weeks before and were waiting now for the troops — waiting for him.
Doubt gripped him. He thought about the Dreamland pilots, watching from across the border. He envied them. Their jobs were entirely physical. They could push their bodies to perform, rely on their trained reactions, their instincts. They trained and retrained for different situations, dogfights and bombing runs, missile attacks and low level escapes. But Stoner had no such luxury. There was no way to train for what he did. Knowing how to fire a gun into a skull at close range, to fake a language — these were important and helpful tools, but not the substance of his success. His test had come days before in Bucharest, when he'd stared into Sorina's eyes, when he'd stroked her side, when he'd gauged her intent.