Pembroke-Smythe ushered them into a compartment that was the command center of the aircraft. The area was spacious and filled with an array of electronic systems. One operator monitored communications equipment while another was in the act of programming data for the approaching mission to Tebezza into a computer.
Colonel Levant graciously came from behind a desk and greeted Pitt and Giordino at the door. He wasn't sure what to expect. He had read extensive dossiers on both men, supplied by the United Nations International Intelligence Service, and could not help but be impressed with their accomplishments. He also read a brief report of their trials in the desert after escaping Tebezza and had to admire their tenacity.
Levant had previously expressed deep reservations about taking Pitt and Giordino along but quickly realized that without their guidance into the mines the operation could be in deep jeopardy. They appeared gaunt and showed the results of long exposure to the sun, but seemed in amazingly good condition as he shook their hands.
"After studying your exploits, gentlemen, I've looked forward to meeting you. I am Colonel Marcel Levant."
"Dirk Pitt, and my nasty little friend here is Al Giordino."
"After reading a report of your ordeal I expected you to be carried on board on stretchers, but I'm pleased to see you look quite fit."
"Liquids, vitamins, and plenty of exercise," said Pitt, smiling, "have their benefits."
"Don't forget fun in the sun," muttered Giordino.
Levant did not respond to the humor but stared past them at Pembroke-Smythe. "Captain, please alert the men and order the chief pilot to prepare for immediate takeoff." Then he turned his attention back to the men standing before him. "If what you say is correct, time is measured in lives. We can run over details for the mission while we're in the air."
Pitt nodded in total accord. "I applaud your expediency."
Levant checked his watch. "Flying time is slightly more than four hours. Our time window is very narrow. We can't delay if we intend to make our assault during the prisoners' rest period. Too soon or too late and they will be scattered throughout the mine shafts on work crews and we'd never find and round them up before our scheduled withdraw."
"Four hours will put us over Tebezza at night."
"Twenty hundred hours give or take five minutes."
"You're going in with landing lights?" asked Pitt incredulously. "You might as well add fireworks to let them know we're coming."
Levant twisted one end of his moustache, a gesture Pitt was to see often in the next ten hours. "We land in the dark.
And before I explain, I think you should sit down and faster your seat belts."
His words enforced with the strangely muted roar of the engines as the pilot advanced the throttles. The big airbus began accelerating down the runway with only the slightest rumble of thrust from its engines.
Giordino found Levant a bit too stuffy and arrogant for his taste and acted with polite indifference. Pitt, on the other hand, recognized a savvy and street-smart operator when he saw one. He also sensed a subtle undercurrent of respect from the Colonel that Giordino missed.
During lift-off, Pitt remarked about the unusual silence of the engines. The typical roar was not evident for an aircraft under full power.
"Specially modified silencers for the turbine exhaust," explained Levant.
"They work well," said Pitt admiringly. "When you landed, I didn't hear a thing until the tires touched down.
"You might call it a stealth factor for covert landings in places we're not welcome."
"Do you also sneak in without lights?"
Levant nodded. "Without lights."
"Is your pilot equipped with fancy, high-tech night vision equipment?"
"No, Mr. Pitt, nothing fancy. Four of my men drop by parachute on the Tebezza airstrip, secure it, and then place a series of infrared lights to guide our pilot onto the runway."
"Once down," said Pitt, "covering the ground between the airstrip and mine entrance in the black of night won't be an easy chore."
"That," said Levant grimly, "is the least of our problems."
The plane was in a gradual climb and banking to the south when he unfastened his seat belt and stepped to a table with an enlarged satellite photo of the plateau above the mines. He picked up a pencil and tapped on the photo.
"Landing helicopters onto the plateau and rappeling down the canyon walls to the mine entrance would have greatly simplified our problem and given us a higher level of surprise. Unfortunately, there were other considerations."
"I understand your dilemma," said Pitt. "A round-trip to Tebezza is beyond helicopter range. Setting up fuel depots across the desert would have cost additional delay."
"Thirty-two hours according to our estimates. We considered leapfrogging our small copter squadron, one carrying fuel while the other carried men and supplies, but we ran into complications with that plan too."
"Too complicated and too slow," said Giordino.
"The speed factor also favored the use of this aircraft," said Levant. "Another important factor of using an airliner over a fleet of helicopters is that we can carry our own transportation. We also have space for on-board medical facilities to tend the large number of people you stated in your report that are in dire need of attention."
How many make up your assault team?" asked Pitt.
"Thirty-eight fighters and two medics," Levant answered. "After we land, four will remain to guard the plane. The medical team will accompany the main force to care for the captives."
"That doesn't leave much room in your personnel carriers to transport everyone."
"If some of my people ride on the roofs and hang onto the sides, we can evacuate forty prisoners."
"There may not be that many left alive," Pitt said solemnly.
"We'll do our best for those who are," Levant assured him.
"And the Malians," Pitt asked, "the political dissenters and enemies of General Kazim. What about them?"
"They will have to remain," Levant shrugged. "All food stores in the mines will be opened to them, and they'll be armed with the guards' weapons. Beyond that, there is little we can do for them. They will be on their own."
"Kazim is sadistic enough to demand their mass execution after he's learned his prize slaves have flown the coop."
"I have my orders," Levant stated simply. "And they don't include saving local criminals."
Pitt stared down at the blowup of the desert surrounding the Tebezza plateau. "So you intend to land the airbus in the dead of night on a desert airstrip, drive over a road that's tough to trace in daylight, assault the mine, carry off all foreign prisoners, and then rush back to the strip and take off for the lights of Algiers. We may be biting off more than we can chew with the limited resources at your command."
Levant saw no disapproval in Pitt's expression, nor did he sense sarcastic criticism. "As you say where you come from, Mr. Pitt, what you see is what you get."
"I'm not doubting the fighting quality of your people, Colonel. But I had expected a larger, better equipped force."
"I regret the UN does not lavishly fund our Response and Tactical Team with expansive manpower and ultrasophisticated equipment like most special operations forces. But our budget is tight and we must work within our limits."
"Why a UNICRATT team?" asked Pitt curiously. "Why not a British or French Foreign Legion commando unit or one from American Special Forces?"
"Because no other nation, including yours, wished to risk dirtying their hands on this mission," explained Levant wearily. "We were volunteered by Secretary General Kamil."
The name brought back a fond memory in Pitt's mind of an interlude spent with Hala Kamil on board a ship in the Straits of Magellan. Two years ago, he recalled, during the search for the Alexandria Library treasures.