"The Americans too?"
"Everyone," he said. "Tell them we are at a delicate stage. Tell them we want them to return to their bases. I've spoken to their general, but he is a pigheaded idiot. Complain to the ambassador. Do whatever you must."
He killed the transmission without waiting for a response. The Americans undoubtedly would ignore this latest order, but they would pay heavily for it.
Zen felt the boy slipping as soon as he cleared the first set of trees. He couldn't grab him because of the wing assembly, and instead tried to push in his stomach toward him. But that started to pitch him forward.
"Hold on, hold on," he said, though he knew the kid couldn't hear. Mircea pushed tighter, gripping the boy, but even so, Zen felt Julian's weight slipping.
The road was on his left, two or three hundred yards away. Zen turned toward it, then realized he wasn't going to make it.
Where was the cutout from the gravel pit? To his right?
The kid clawed at him. There wasn't any time — Zen pushed right. The clearing appeared just a few yards away. He leaned forward, gliding to it, then backing off on the power. As he did, Julian slid between his mother and Zen, who cut his power abruptly. All three of them fell together, until at the last second, Zen jerked the engines back to life, preventing another hard landing.
"Let's try again," he yelled, adjusting the thrust from the engine so his feet were hovering just above the ground. "Mrs. Voda, loosen the strap at my arms and string your son through it."
Mircea didn't move.
"Come on now. I have to go back and pick up your husband. Go!"
She still didn't move. Zen started to undo the strap that held her to him, then saw Julian stumbling toward him.
"Come on, Julian," he said. "We have to move so we can help your dad."
The strap, custom-designed to fit Zen's body, didn't have any play in it. The only other thing he could use was the belt that strapped his lower body to the MESSKIT. Loosening it meant he wouldn't have as much control over the device, but there was no way the kid was going to be able to hold on.
Zen slid his hand out from the wing assembly and helped Julian climb up between him and his mother, then undid the lower torso strap and threaded it around the boy's arms, pulling it so tight that it must have hurt, though Julian didn't react. Then Zen hooked it around his chest strap in a knot.
"Hang on," he said, and they started upward once more.
Mack paced in front of the big display screen.His stomach was rumbling and he had a headache. Every time he scratched the side of his head, more hairs fell out. And he swore he saw hives on the back on his hand.
This behind-the-scenes crap was hell on the nerves. Much better to be on the front line actually doing something instead of pacing back and forth and disintegrating miles from the action.
"Jennifer Gleason for you, Major Smith," said the communications officer.
"There we go." Mack punched in the line. "Got it?"
"I do. It wasn't as easy as Ray thought. First I had to code—"
"Yeah, yeah, yeah. What do we do?"
As soon as his wife and son rose into the sky, Voda remembered that he hadn't kissed them good-bye. He'd never been an overly sentimental man, but he cursed himself as he started down the slope. He might very well never see them again.
Voda followed the elbow of the creek, walking along the rocks for about twenty yards. He could hear the dogs now, barking loudly. He turned and started down. But his weakened knee betrayed him — he collapsed, falling through a spread of prickle bushes.
At least Julian was safe. He could accept death knowing that.
What a strange life he'd had. Mozart and politics.
The Sonata in A Minor, K. 310, began playing in his head, The pace of the music quickening, matching his pounding heart.
Grabbing onto a small sapling, Voda pulled himself up and began walking. The pain in his leg seemed to have fled— or maybe he'd stopped feeling anything at all. Then his feet gave way. He tumbled down five or six yards, smacking hard against a tree.
He pushed to get up, but found he couldn't.
This was where it was going to end, he thought. He reached for his pistol.
It was gone. He'd lost it somewhere above.
Starship slid his headset back, watching the clock dial revolve on the Flighthawk control screen. Finally the hand stopped. The screen blinked, and update loaded appeared in the center.
He pushed the headset back into place.
"Ready," he told Englehardt.
"Let 'er rip," answered the Johnson's pilot.
Easy for him to say, Starship thought. If the update screwed up, he was the one who'd lose total control of Hawk Three. And knowing General Samson's reputation, it was a good bet he would be paying for the aircraft out of his own pocket.
He and all his offspring, for the next seven generations.
"Reboot C3 remote, authorization alpha-beta-six-six-beta-seven-four-zed-zed," he said, giving his authorization code. "I am Lieutenant Kirk Andrews."
The computer thought about it for a second, then beeped its approval.
"Hawk Three is coming to course," Starship told En-glehardt. He banked the Flighthawk out of the figure-eight patrol orbit it had been flying and took it near the hill. He had to stay above 10,000 feet or he'd be heard; he nudged the aircraft to 10,500.
A yellow helix appeared on the screen. The symbol was usually used by the computer to indicate where a disconnected Flighthawk was; now it showed the location of the cell phone they were tracking.
No. It was three miles from the hill, to the south, near an army watch post. It was the wrong transmission.
Starship took the Flighthawk farther north.
Nothing.
"Hey, you sure this guy is on the air?" Starship asked En-glehardt.
"We'll have to ask Mack."
"Well, get him on. I'm not picking up anything."
"The cell transmission died," the communications specialist told Mack. "What do you mean, it died?"
"He lost his connection or his battery died. I don't know." "Call him," said Mack.
"I don't know, Major. We don't know how close he is to the people looking for him."
"Call him the hell back."
"Incoming transmission from the Johnson."
"Screen." Mack turned around. Lieutenant Mike Engle-hardt's face bounced back and forth. Though Mack was sure he'd been told a million times to keep his head still while he spoke, the pilot still jerked around nervously. Good thing he didn't fly that way.
"Major Smith, we're having trouble here with the cell phone from President Voda."
"Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm on it. Keep your speed pants zipped."
"Major, we're getting a broadcast over the Romanian air defense frequencies you want to hear," said the communications specialist, cutting into his conversation. "Channel Two."
"Stand by Johnson." Mack felt the hives on his hands percolating as he flicked into the transmission. "Damn, man. This is in Romanian."
"It comes back in English."
A few seconds later the English version began.
"All planes flying above latitude 46 degree north will immediately cease operations and return to base. This airspace is closed to all military and civilian flights, foreign and domestic. All flights will vacate this space immediately."