“I haven’t seen him since I left,” Bennett said. “My guess is they turned back.”
“Good,” the voice said, “then my plan should work. Get out your chart.”
Bennett opened the chart showing Scotland. “Got it,” he said.
“Do you see Inverness?”
Bennett glanced at the chart. “Yep.”
“Right south of there, do you see the large lake?”
“You’re kidding,” Bennett said.
“Nope,” the voice said, “Loch Ness. Fly along the east side—we have a team on the ground in a truck. They are going to pop smoke so you can see them.”
Popping smokewas a military term for igniting smoke grenades to mark a position.
“Then what?” Bennett asked.
“Come in low and drop the cargo out the door,” the voice said. “They will retrieve it and bring it the rest of the way.”
“What about me?” Bennett asked.
“You let the fighter jets force you down at an airport,” the voice said. “Then once the Cessna is searched and found to be empty, they will think this was all just a mistake.”
“Brilliant,” Bennett said.
“That’s what I thought too,” the voice said before disconnecting.
THE ROBINSON HELICOPTER carrying Cabrillo and Adams passed over the rocky shoreline. Adams made a thumbs-up sign to Cabrillo, then turned on the microphone.
“Looks like we’ll live,” Adams said. “If we run out of fuel now, I can do an autorotation to the ground.”
“I hope that if it comes to that, you’ve been practicing.”
“I do a few every week,” Adams said, “just in case.”
The cloud cover was thickening the farther inland they flew. Every now and then the men could catch a glimpse of the snow-covered hills of Scotland below. Thirty seconds earlier, Cabrillo had caught a quick glimpse of the flashing taillight of the Cessna above.
“The jets should be out there now,” Cabrillo said as he reached for the satellite telephone and called Hanley.
THE OREGONWAS steaming south from the Faeroe Islands at full speed. Soon a decision would have to be made about whether to steam west along Scotland and Ireland or east between the Shetland Islands and the Orkneys into the North Sea. Hanley was watching the projections flash across the monitors when his telephone rang.
“What’s the status?” Cabrillo asked without preamble.
“Overholt had trouble getting the British jets scrambled,” Hanley said. “Last word was they just left Mindenhall. If they travel at Mach one-plus, they should reach you in a half hour, give or take.”
“We don’t have a half hour of fuel left,” Cabrillo said.
“I’m sorry, Juan,” Hanley said. “I dispatched the Challenger from Aberdeen to take up the pursuit until the fighters arrive. They can track the Cessna and call me with the information. We’re going to get this guy—don’t worry about that.”
“What about the yacht?”
“It steamed from the port in the Faeroe Islands ten minutes ago,” Hanley reported. “A U.S. guided-missile frigate is on a course to intercept her out in the Atlantic.”
“Finally,” Cabrillo said, “some good news.”
Hanley was staring at the monitor that showed the position of the Cessna and the Robinson. At the same time, he was listening to the copilot of the Challenger giving an update over the radio speaker in the control room. The Challenger was picking up the two aircraft on their radar scope and closing quickly.
“The Cessna is just now flying over Inverness,” Hanley said. “The Challenger has him on their scope. How much fuel do you have left?”
Cabrillo spoke over the headset to Adams. “Can we make Inverness before we run out of fuel?”
“I think so,” Adams said, “we picked up a tailwind once we crossed onto land.”
“Enough to make Inverness,” Cabrillo said to Hanley.
Hanley was going to recommend that Cabrillo and Adams stop and refuel but he never had the chance. Right at that instant the copilot of the Challenger called in to report again. All of a sudden the Cessna was descending.
“Juan,” Hanley said quickly, “the Challenger just reported the Cessna is starting a descent.”
On the moving map aboard the Robinson, Inverness was only a few miles ahead.
“Where is he trying to land?” Cabrillo asked.
“It looks like Loch Ness, along the eastern side.”
“I’ll call you back,” Cabrillo said to Hanley before disconnecting.
The weather was turning worse and rain began running along the windshield of the Robinson in tiny streams. Adams turned up the fan on the defroster and stared at the fuel gauge apprehensively.
“Do you believe in monsters?” Cabrillo asked Adams.
“I believe in monster trucks,” Adams answered, “why do you ask?”
Cabrillo pointed to the moving map. The cigar-shaped mark of Loch Ness was just coming into view. “According to Hanley, the Cessna is on a descent for a landing along the east side of Loch Ness.”
In the last few minutes, Adams had been able to catch a few glimpses of the ground before the clouds closed in. “I don’t think so,” he said.
“Why not?” Cabrillo asked.
“Too hilly,” Adams noted, “there’s no place for a runway.”
“Then that must mean—” Cabrillo started to say.
“He’s making a drop,” Adams said, finishing the sentence.
AS SOON AS he received Bennett’s call that the Cessna had left the Faeroe Islands and was being followed, the leader of the operation ordered two of the four men waiting at Glasgow to drive north at breakneck speed. The two men had made the hundred-plus-mile trip to Loch Ness in less than two hours, and they awaited further instructions. Ten minutes ago the men had received word to head to the east side of the loch, find a desolate area, and then wait until they were notified. Two minutes ago, a call came in ordering them to light their smoke grenades and wait for a package to be dropped.
The men were sitting in the back of the van with the doors open, watching the smoke being blown about by the rain. The plane was due to arrive any minute.
“Did you hear that?” one of the men asked, hearing the sound of a plane.
“It’s growing louder,” the second man said.
“I thought our guy was in a…”
Bennett fought the controls as the jet wash from the Challenger buffeted the air around the Cessna. Whoever was flying the corporate jet was a madman or an incompetent, he thought. Surely his tiny plane must have been on their radar scope.
“Two hundred feet,” the copilot of the Challenger said. “We lose an engine now and we’re toast.”
“Watch out the window,” the pilot ordered. “I’ll make one pass and then pull up.”
The Challenger streaked above the ground, barely clearing the hilltops. In the jet’s wake, snow was blowing in vortices from the rear. A taller hill dominated the view out the windshield and the pilot pulled up on the yoke then dropped the altitude again when they’d crossed over. They were flying over the loch now.
“There,” the copilot said, pointing to a van on the eastern shore nearest Inverness, “I see smoke.”
The pilot glanced over, then pulled back on the yoke and began climbing into the sky again. “Oregon,”he said once they had reached a safe cruising speed again, “we have a van on the eastern shore with smoke markers ignited. How long until the fighters are due to arrive?”
“Challenger,” Hanley said, “the fighters are still fifteen minutes distant.”
“They’re going to try a drop,” the pilot of the Challenger said.
“Thanks for the report,” Hanley said.
“THEY ARE GOING to try a drop,” Cabrillo said as soon as Hanley answered.