The two jets had completed their turns and were approaching Bennett head-on.
He waved his wings in reply—then he reached for the satellite telephone.
SO CLOSE AND yet so far.
Cabrillo glanced out the side window before the helicopter dropped behind a hill. The van and the drop zone were less than a mile away. Even if Adams could get them to the ground alive, by the time they climbed from the Robinson and jogged to the site, the van—and the meteorite—would be gone.
He clutched his satellite telephone to his chest and braced to hit the ground.
THE DRIVER OF the van slammed it into gear and stepped on the gas. The rear tires pawed at the muddy soil and spit peat into the air. Fishtailing, he reached the pavement and started down the road to the south.
He glanced quickly in his rearview mirror and found the road empty.
ADAMS PLAYED THE Robinson with all the finesse of a concert violinist. Gauging his flare with precision, he pulled up on the cyclic at the last possible second when the helicopter was in an arc only a few feet off the ground. The change in pitch on the rotor blades bled off the last of the stored air speed and the Robinson stopped in the air and dropped the last few feet to the road on her skids. The airframe took a thump, but not a hard one. Looking over at Cabrillo, Adams exhaled in a loud burst.
“Damn, you’re good,” Cabrillo said.
“That was a rough one,” Adams said, removing his headset and opening the door.
The helicopter was blocking the road almost completely.
“If we had a mile more fuel,” Cabrillo said, opening the door and stepping out, “we’d’ve had them.”
The men rose to their full height on the road and stretched.
“You’d better call Mr. Hanley and report that we’ve lost them,” Adams said as Shea and the MG appeared over the hill and slowed because the road was blocked.
“In a minute,” Cabrillo said, glancing at the MG as it pulled to a stop.
Shea poked his head out the side window. “You men need some help?” he asked in a Texas twang.
Cabrillo trotted over to the MG. “You an American?”
“Born and raised,” Shea said proudly.
“We are working directly for the president on a matter of national security,” Cabrillo said quickly. “I’m going to need your car.”
“Man,” Shea said, “I just bought it like three days ago.”
Cabrillo reached in and opened the door. “I’m sorry, it’s a life-or-death matter.”
Shea pulled on the emergency brake and climbed out.
Cabrillo motioned to Adams with his satellite telephone as he started to climb into the MG. “I’ll call the Oregon,” he said, “and have them get ahold of somebody and have fuel delivered.”
“Yes, sir,” Adams said.
Cabrillo pushed the starter button and pushed in the clutch and popped the old MG into gear. Then he turned the wheel and started a U-turn.
“Hey,” Shea said, “what am I supposed to do?”
“Stay with the helicopter,” Cabrillo shouted out the side window. “We’ll take care of everything later.”
With the MG now straight, he punched the throttle and sped away. In a few seconds he was over the hill and out of sight. Shea walked over to Adams, who was checking the helicopter’s skids.
“I’m Billy Joe Shea,” he said, extending his hand. “You mind telling me who that was that took my car?”
“That man?” Adams asked. “I’ve never seen him before in my life.”
30
RICHARD “DICK” TRUITTscrolled through Hickman’s computer files. There was so much information that the going was slow. Finally he decided to just link onto the Oregon’s computer and send the entire contents of Hickman’s machine. Establishing a link, he began to transmit the data to a satellite that relayed the data stream down to the ship.
Then he rose from the desk chair and began to search the office.
Truitt removed several sheets of paper and a few photographs from a desk drawer, folded them and placed them in his jacket. He was scanning the bookshelf along the wall when he heard the front door open and the sound of a voice fill the hall.
“Just now?” the voice said.
There was no answer—the man was speaking into a portable telephone.
“Five minutes ago?” the voice said, now growing louder. “Why the hell didn’t you send up security immediately?”
The sound of footsteps in the hallway grew louder. Truitt slipped into the bathroom attached to the office and then ran through to a spare bedroom on the other side. Another hallway led through to the living room. He crept along slowly.
“We know you’re in here,” the voice said. “My security people are on their way up here now. They have the elevator blocked, so you might as well just surrender.”
THE KEY TO a good plan is imagining the contingencies. The key to a great plan is imagining them all. The data from Hickman’s computer was flying through the air and down to the Oregon.Three-quarters of the information had transferred when Hickman walked into the room. Truitt had missed one small point—he’d forgotten to turn off the screen. As soon as Hickman entered, he realized that the screensaver was not on and someone had been accessing the computer.
Racing to the machine, he turned it off. Then he checked and found the vial from Vanderwald undisturbed in his desk drawer.
TRUITT SLIPPED DOWN the hall and into the living room. The sliding glass door was still cracked open. He quickly made his way through the living room. He was almost at the door when he bumped a sculpture and it fell and cracked.
Hickman heard the noise and raced down the hall.
Truitt was through the sliding glass door and on the rear patio when Hickman entered the living room and saw him outside. The intruder was dressed in black and moved with a certain purpose. Still, he was trapped on the patio and the guards were on their way up the elevator.
Hickman slowed to relish the moment.
“Just stop where you are,” he said, peering out of the glass door. “There’s no escape now.”
The man turned and looked directly at Hickman. Then he smiled, climbed on the chest-high wall surrounding the patio, nodded, then waved. Turning around, he leapt off the wall and into the darkness. Hickman was still standing there in shock when the security guards burst into the room.
BLIND FAITH IS a powerful emotion.
And that was all Truitt had at the instant he pulled the cord attached to the front of his jacket. Blind faith in the Oregon’s Magic Shop. Blind faith that Kevin Nixon’s invention would work. A split second after pulling the cord, a small drag chute popped from the rear of the jacket and ripped the Velcro holding the back of the jacket together. An instant later, a pair of wings like those on a Chinese fighting kite unfolded and locked into place. Four-foot-by-four-foot flaps attached by shock cords dropped below the wings like air brakes on a plane.
Truitt slowed and began to gain control.
“GET READY,” GUNDERSON said, “he’s coming down fast.”
Pilston stared up and caught sight of Truitt for just a second as he passed through a spotlight sweeping the sky near the volcano. Truitt made a 360-degree turn in the air then straightened out. He was ten feet above the sidewalk, twenty yards in front of the Jeep, racing away from them. Luckily the sidewalk was almost empty. This late at night most of the tourists were already in bed or bound tight to the gambling tables. Truitt continued in a straight line.
Gunderson twisted the key on the Jeep and the engine roared to life. He slammed it into gear and raced forward after Truitt. Nine feet, eight feet, but Truitt was having trouble bringing it down to earth. He raced along, his feet still hanging free in the air.