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After about twenty minutes, he leveled the Predator at 800 feet above ground level, the normal height C-130 and C-141 aircraft flying near Fort Bragg used when they conducted parachute-drop operations. He set the speed at 70 mph and locked in an azimuth of 207 degrees, a south by southwesterly heading. Through the camera, Ballantine could see the occasional house or cluster of lights indicating a suburb. He checked the global-positioning-system grid coordinate against the map on the wall in the command center and realized the Predator had just passed into North Carolina. He released the joystick, watching as the autopilot took over.

Ballantine pressed a small green button on the computer terminal and watched as a second computer screen started flashing computer-generated dots from a central position on the screen to a single moving icon. Ballantine was pleased to see that Dr. Insect’s nanotechnology was working. The Queen Bee was communicating with the first Predator.

After about five minutes, he was confident that the aircraft would hold the desired course and, in about two hours, would achieve the desired effect.

Ballantine pressed a button labeled monitor only, which turned off the camera display from Predator One but continued to display the grid coordinate progress of the aircraft. Placing Predator One in monitor-only mode allowed him to free up enough bandwidth to launch Predator Two using the video feed.

Ballantine thought back two years to the original e-mail from a contact in France with encoded messages pertaining to the Fong Hou, the Predators, and the final mission of attacking the listed targets with unmanned aircraft. He remembered reviewing the information on his Dell laptop using Microsoft Word after he had downloaded the e-mail and its instructions of terror from his Yahoo! e-mail account. He had been curious, but delighted, about the China connection. China brought to the table what all the other nations had been lacking — unlimited resources and ample technology under a veil of extreme secrecy.

The nuclear-grade material, the chemicals, and the germs were all refined in China. They were put on a simple merchant ship and were being transferred to the most surprising means of attack — American Predators — that anyone could imagine. Ballantine smiled at the thought, then spoke into his headset. “Admiral, prepare Predator Two.”

CHAPTER 54

Aboard the Fong Hou

Matt watched through his night-vision goggles as the Predator whined and lifted slowly into the sky, eventually drifting out of sight.

One down, he thought to himself. Ballantine is holding Zachary hostage on this ship while he launches nukes and God knows what else at the United States. At least Matt had made a phone call to the one person who he thought might be able to do something about it. Maybe he was wrong, but it was worth the chance.

He walked slowly, hunched over, staying low to avoid what looked like firing parapets in some of the containers. He could barely make out the space-needle satellite antenna near the bridge of the ship. He focused on that while keeping an eye on the containers. Something didn’t feel right about them.

Fifty feet from an opening that led to the bridge, he saw a muzzle slide slowly out of a small rectangular hole in the container on his left. The muzzle was no more than two feet in front of his face.

He froze and watched the bore drift toward him, stopping before the barrel of the weapon reached his head. It then slid slowly away from him. He gently moved toward the container so that he was flush with the wall. The muzzle swept its sector again and then retreated into the container.

Matt waited for a few seconds and then proceeded. He could hear talking as he passed below the firing parapet and paused long enough to recognize it as Chinese. He stopped near the ladder to the bridge.

Through his goggles, he looked up to the bridge and saw a bright spot inside the hexagon of a steering room. He could see four or five panes of square glass and a dim light, with other lights flashing, the way a television does as it changes images during a program. The lights were different hues of green through his goggles, so he lifted his headset and paused a second before opening his eyes again.

Matt remained focused on the six-sided command center, approaching the ladder with stealth. He was a bit concerned that it had so far been too easy. His general work ethic told him that if something was easy, it was probably not worth the effort. The harder the task, the more worthwhile the endeavor. Not that what he had been through over the past year had been easy, but this specific phase, this subset, was too simple.

As if it was a trap.

“Matt Garrett, I presume?”

The voice was a deep, penetrating baritone that rang an alarm bell inside Matt’s most primal hiding places. And the words were followed by an audible click of a weapon hammer locking to the rear.

“Ballantine, how pleasant,” Matt said without turning. “I thought I killed you back at Moncrief.”

“You Americans think you have martyred so many freedom fighters that are still alive.”

“Glad to have another shot at it,” Matt replied.

“Cocky son of a bitch,” Ballantine said with a chuckle.

“I have an idea, Ballantine.”

Matt was still facing away from Ballantine and now he could feel the cool circular rim of some form of firearm pressed against his head.

“I like ideas, Garrett.”

“You had Hellerman send me up to Moncrief so you could kill me up there, but I was always curious about why you didn’t just come down to Stanardsville and kill me there. What gives?”

“You have such an inquiring mind, Mr. Garrett. And such an imagination, implicating your own vice president in our scheme.”

“The way I see it, my brother Zachary captured you, fought you man-to-man,” Matt said. “He killed your brother in the process, but, hey, it was war. Hellerman helped you out when you were a prisoner after Zachary captured you in Iraq. He was a Reserve officer in military intelligence when he interrogated you.”

“Young men have such imaginations,” Ballantine said.

Matt continued. “You told him that you had a tape recording of his voice telling the ambassador to go ahead and let Iraq attack Kuwait. See, Hellerman wanted the war for some insane personal reasons and, of course, Hussein wanted Kuwait for his own, shall we say, personal reasons.”

“You are a bright young man, Matt Garrett. But while I appreciate this history lesson, we have business to attend to. I will kill you while your brother watches, and then he and I will both fly away in my airplane to attack your White House. Sound like fun?”

“Loads. But hear me out, Ballantine. Anyway, you promised Hellerman that you would give him the only copy of the tape on which his very distinctive voice authorizes the ambassador to tell Hussein it is okay to attack Kuwait. It was your insurance policy.”

“Don’t be so sure of yourself. I’ve received help from any number of accomplices.”

“Well, Rampert’s a soldier. Hellerman’s a weasel politician. That’s a no-brainer. Where’s Lantini, by the way?”

“All politicians are weasels, no argument there. You’ll see Ronnie Wood soon enough.” Ballantine laughed.

Matt felt the barrel of the weapon push him toward the ladder.

“Good,” Matt said, and with one swift movement he spun, lifting his left arm and cracking it against the pistol Ballantine was holding. The pistol fired one shot as Ballantine lost control of it, the shot going wide, striking metal with a high-resolution ping behind Matt’s ear. The pistol made a loud clanking noise as it dropped on the deck of the ship.